No-Knead Focaccia
Cuisine: ItalianDifficulty: EasyServings
10-12
servingsPrep time
40
minutesCooking time
30
minutesIngredients
2¼ tsp active dry yeast
2 tsp honey
2½ cups lukewarm water
5 cups (625 g) all-purpose flour
5 tsp Diamond Crystal or 1 tbsp Morton kosher salt
6 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, divided, plus more for hands
4 tbsp unsalted butter, plus more for pan
Flaky sea salt
2-4 garlic cloves
Directions
- Whisk active dry yeast, honey, and lukewarm water in a medium bowl and let sit 5 minutes (it should foam or at least get creamy; if it doesn’t your yeast is dead and you should start again—check the expiration date!).
- Add flour and Diamond Crystal or Morton kosher salt and mix with a rubber spatula until a shaggy dough forms and no dry streaks remain.
- Pour 4 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil into a big bowl that will fit in your refrigerator. Transfer dough to bowl and turn to coat in oil. Cover with a silicone lid or plastic wrap and chill until dough is doubled in size (it should look very bubbly and alive), at least 8 hours and up to 1 day. If you’re in a rush, you can also let it rise at room temperature until doubled in size, 3–4 hours.
- Generously butter a 13x9” baking pan, for thicker focaccia that’s perfect for sandwiches, or an 18x13” rimmed baking sheet, for focaccia that’s thinner, crispier, and great for snacking. The butter may seem superfluous, but it’ll ensure that your focaccia doesn’t stick. Pour 1 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil into center of pan. Keeping the dough in the bowl and gather up edges of dough farthest from you and lift up and over into center of bowl. Give the bowl a quarter turn and repeat process. Do this 2 more times; you want to deflate dough while you form it into a rough ball. Transfer dough to prepared pan. Pour any oil left in bowl over and turn dough to coat it in oil. Let rise, uncovered, in a dry, warm spot (like near a radiator or on top of the fridge or a preheating oven) until doubled in size, at least 1½ hours and up to 4 hours.
- Place a rack in middle of oven; preheat to 450 degrees. To see if the dough is ready, poke it with your finger. It should spring back slowly, leaving a small visible indentation. If it springs back quickly, the dough isn’t ready. If at this point the dough is ready to bake but you aren’t, you can chill it up to 1 hour.
- Lightly oil your hands. If using a rimmed baking sheet, gently stretch out dough to fill (you probably won’t need to do this if using a baking pan). Dimple focaccia all over with your fingers, like you’re aggressively playing the piano, creating very deep depressions in the dough (reach your fingers all the way to the bottom of the pan). Drizzle with remaining 1 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil and sprinkle with flaky sea salt.
- Bake focaccia until puffed and golden brown all over, 20–30 minutes.