The one simple tip that made my homemade focaccia instantly better (2024)

EXPLAINER

Turns out, my dough needed a gentler touch

By Ashlie D. Stevens

Food Editor

Published March 30, 2022 7:25PM (EDT)

The one simple tip that made my homemade focaccia instantly better (1)

Freshly baked focaccia bread with a rosemary and red onion topping, cooling on a wire rack(Getty images/Ian Laker Photography)

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Once the pandemic hit, the types of content shared in my bread baking groups on social media slowly began to shift. Asgrocery store shelves thinned out, there were desperate pleas to buy flour and yeast from fellow bakers. Hoards of new members began sharing photographs of their sourdough starters; the new ones were welcomed with names, while the old ones were mourned when they stopped bubbling. What's more, a certain genre of video began to dominate timelines.

The videos all began in a similar fashion. The camera would linger on a bulbous, smooth ball of airy dough until a hand appeared out of frame to punch the center like a boxer jabbing at a bag. It would, of course, deflate, and the camera would again linger on the indentation. The comments section was populated with some variation of the words "so satisfying."

After the first rise, many recipes call for the baker to deflate — or "punch down" — the dough. It's an important step: When the dough is punched down, the yeast cells are redistributed. They form a closer bond with the moisture and sugar, which aids fermentation and improves the second rise.

To boot, it was a moment in time when seemingly everyone was "rage baking"or "stress baking."As a result, there was something inherently satisfying about this part of the bread-baking process.

It was also around the same time that I began to bake focaccia. I, too, derived pleasure from feeling the weight of the dough sink underneath my clenched fist. It felt not only controlled but also intensely dramatic. I could see Nicolas Cage's Ronny Cammareri, the charismatic baker from "Moonstruck," raging about something while aggressively punching an industrial-sized vat of dough. (I could see it so vividly that I had to rewatch the movie to see if such a scene actually existed; it doesn't.)

Though the process was satisfying, my focaccia was always a little bit . . . off. While the focaccia I loved to order from bakeries and restaurants had an airiness and lightness, mine always looked compact in comparison. I turned to my bread baking groups for help. Everyone had a suggestion: buy a different flour, use sparkling instead of still water in the dough orpray to the bread gods for mercy.

Nothing really clicked until a helpful commenter posted a YouTube video of professional baker and cookbook writer Claire Saffitz making focaccia. "Skip ahead to 6 minutes in," they wrote. "I think this will help you."

Related: Baking our way through survival

At this point in the video, Saffitz's focaccia has completed its first rise. Instead of punching it down, she makes a point to gently fold the dough instead.

"I'm going to go down around the sides and lift it up," she said. "Then I give it a little wiggle and give the bowl a little turn."

Saffitzrepeated this step over and over until beautiful pockets of air formed under her fingers and bubbled up to the surface of the dough ball. Those bubbles remained through the second rise and the baking process, leaving the finished product similarly light to the bakery focaccia I so coveted.

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The next day, I pulled out my ingredients to attempt the same technique — and it worked. My focaccia went from flat and dense to fully-risen with a gorgeous open crumb. There's a bread baking technique to back this up.

As Elizabeth Yetter wrote in her helpful primer "How To Punch Down Bread Dough," the more air pockets "you can remove from the dough, the finer the grain (or crumb) will be." While that's great for sandwich bread or sweet rolls, it's not as desirable for loaves, like focaccia, where you want airiness.

I feel as though there's some metaphor here, right? At this point, we're years into the pandemic. After the world has punched us down (so much), maybe a gentler touch is what we need in order to thrive. However, if you find yourself wanting the palpable satisfaction of punching into a ball of dough, perhapspie crust is in your future?

This piece originally appeared in The Bite, Salon's weekly food newsletter. Sign up here to make sure you don't miss any original essays, how-tos and recipes.

Read more of our favorite stories about bread:

  • This simple, braided apple butter bread only looks complicated
  • The best garlic bread has a secret ingredient and takes 10 minutes
  • The ultimate comfort bake: How to make perfect quick breads at home, according to a pastry chef
  • You can bake this quick loaf with ingredients on hand in your pantry, because substitutions are easy

By Ashlie D. Stevens

Ashlie D. Stevens is Salon's food editor. She is also an award-winning radio producer, editor and features writer — with a special emphasis on food, culture and subculture.Her writing has appeared in and on The Atlantic, National Geographic’s “The Plate,” Eater, VICE, Slate, Salon, The Bitter Southerner and Chicago Magazine, while her audio work has appeared on NPR’s All Things Considered and Here & Now, as well as APM’s Marketplace. She is based in Chicago.

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The one simple tip that made my homemade focaccia instantly better (2024)

FAQs

Is focaccia better with bread flour or all purpose flour? ›

Focaccia: The two focaccias were very different. The one made with bread flour was taller, airier, had much more open bubbles in the crumb, and browned nicely. In the mixer, the all-purpose dough never seemed to come together as a cohesive whole in the same way as the bread flour dough.

Why is my focaccia not airy? ›

Why is my focaccia not fluffy or chewy? It could be the type of flour you used. The best flour to use to make focaccia bread is bread flour which gives you fluffy baked bread. Or, it could also be because you did not knead the dough enough for the gluten to form a structure which can result in flat or dense bread.

What kind of olive oil is best for focaccia? ›

Use a high quality extra virgin olive oil and don't be shy with it – this is a recipe that relies heavily on extra virgin olive oil not just for the taste but also for the texture and that golden and crunchy crust. It's important we are not skimping on the quality which is why I recommend using Rich Glen olive oil.

Why is my homemade focaccia so dense? ›

Not enough water: This can leave you with dense, dry focaccia. For accuracy, measure out your ingredients using weight instead of cups to ensure you have the right ratio of ingredients.

How wet should focaccia dough be? ›

This dough will be very, very wet – almost like cake mix. If you can, wet your hands (to stop them sticking) and fold the dough over a little, just to see what a dough of this wetness (or 'hydration') feels like.

What happens if you use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour? ›

Bread Flour Substitute

You can always substitute all-purpose flour for bread flour one for one in any recipe that calls for it. Your bread might not raise quite as high or have quite as much chew, if you are using all-purpose flour, but it will still be delicious and homemade and all the good things.

What are the two types of focaccia? ›

Venetian focaccia is sweet, baked for Easter and resembles the traditional Christmas cake panettone. Sugar and butter are used instead of olive oil and salt. Focaccia barese, which is common in Puglia in southern Italy, is made with durum wheat flour and topped with salt, rosemary, tomatoes or olives.

Why does focaccia use so much olive oil? ›

Now, focaccia uses plenty of olive oil, not only in the dough, but for kneading, proofing, in the baking pan, and on the bread's surface before baking. All this fat means the texture is light, moist and springy, the crust emerges golden and crisp, plus the center stays soft for days afterwards.

Can I use vegetable oil instead of olive oil in focaccia bread? ›

A good quality olive oil is the best kind of oil to use for focaccia, but you can also use vegetable oil or another plain oil that doesn't have a strong taste like canola or sunflower oil. If you do want to add some extra flavour to your bread you could try an infused oil, like garlic for example.

Should you punch down focaccia dough? ›

It's an important step: When the dough is punched down, the yeast cells are redistributed. They form a closer bond with the moisture and sugar, which aids fermentation and improves the second rise.

What happens if you let focaccia dough rise too long? ›

If your focaccia dough starts to look flat and kind of sunken in on top it is probably overproofed.

Should you stretch and fold focaccia? ›

Give the dough 4 sets of stretches and folds (fold a side of the dough up and over to the other side, and then rotate the container to perform 4 folds per set), starting 30 minutes after mixing, and a set every 30 minutes after that.

Is it better to make bread with all-purpose flour or bread flour? ›

Since bread flour has a higher protein content than all-purpose flour, it's able to develop more gluten. This leads to bread with more chew—a desirable characteristic in pizza dough, flatbread, or sourdough.

What is the best flour for focaccia 00? ›

I am testing some different flours for my focaccia in search of a more open crumb and more oven spring and have found that I achieve a lighter more open airy crust with a 75% Central Milling ABC+ (11.5% Protein Content) 25% Semola Rimacinata combination.

Why isn't my focaccia dough rising? ›

Add more yeast, blend in the starter, or knead in more flour to help initiate rising. Dough that has expired yeast, too much salt, all-purpose or cake flour, or antifungal spices like cinnamon might have trouble rising.

Why is my focaccia not turning brown? ›

Why is my focaccia not browning? If there's too much steam in your oven and your bread doesn't bake for very long, you won't get the level of browning you might want.

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