Everyone Loves Focaccia, featuring Samin Nosrat
44 min
•Mar 30, 20262 months agoSummary
This episode explores the focaccia renaissance, tracing how the bread evolved from a thin, dense fixture in 1990s Italian restaurants to a trendy, high-hydration, bubbly creation dominating modern bakeries. Guest Samin Nosrat discusses her viral Netflix salt-brine technique and her new focaccia recipe, while hosts Jessica Badalana and David Smarkin reveal King Arthur's 2025 Recipe of the Year and address listener questions about open crumb, storage, and the maximalist trend of experimental focaccia variations.
Insights
- Focaccia's mainstream popularity surge was catalyzed by visual media (Netflix's Salt Fat Acid Heat) and influencer bakers, demonstrating how food trends now spread through accessible, visually compelling content rather than traditional culinary channels
- Modern focaccia represents a shift toward maximalism and experimentation (sweet, savory, hybrid variations), but this trend coexists with renewed interest in traditional Ligurian techniques, suggesting bifurcated consumer preferences
- High-hydration dough (80%+) and extended proofing are the technical foundations for open crumb focaccia, but pan-baking mitigates overproofing risk, making focaccia an ideal entry-level bread for novice bakers
- Focaccia's versatility—as a sandwich base, side dish, or canvas for toppings—combined with low technical barriers and high reward-to-effort ratio, explains its adoption across skill levels and commercial bakeries
- Baker's math and stretch-and-fold techniques enable home bakers to achieve professional results without specialized equipment, democratizing bread-baking knowledge
Trends
Focaccia maximalism: experimental flavor combinations (cinnamon roll, strawberry danish, buffalo chicken, jelly donut focaccia) driven by Instagram trends and 'Will It Focaccia' viral challengesVisual-first food marketing: Netflix and social media driving bread trends more effectively than traditional culinary education or cookbooksReturn to traditional techniques: renewed interest in Ligurian salt-brine method and heritage focaccia recipes alongside modern high-hydration variationsDemocratization of advanced baking techniques: stretch-and-fold and baker's math making professional-quality bread accessible to home bakers without mixers or special equipmentPan bread innovation: commercial bakeries experimenting with thickness, hydration, and topping strategies to differentiate focaccia offeringsIngredient-forward baking: bread flour adoption and custom herb blends (fennel pollen, oregano, thyme) elevating focaccia quality and shelf appealLow-barrier entry baking: focaccia positioned as ideal first bread project due to minimal shaping pressure and high success rateSustainability in leftover bread: creative repurposing strategies (croutons, grilled sandwiches, inside-out technique) reducing waste
Topics
Focaccia bread baking techniques and recipesHigh-hydration dough formulation and baker's mathStretch-and-fold fermentation methodsSalt-brine technique for focacciaBread flour vs. all-purpose flour in focacciaFocaccia proofing and rise managementOpen crumb development in breadFocaccia topping and flavor variationsFocaccia storage and reheating methodsGrilled focaccia sandwich techniquesHerb dehydration and finishing techniquesFocaccia as entry-level bread for beginnersCommercial focaccia innovation and differentiationFood trends driven by social media and visual contentLigurian focaccia traditions and regional variations
Companies
King Arthur Baking Company
Host company; published 2025 Recipe of the Year (big and bubbly focaccia) and maintains extensive focaccia recipe col...
Lodge Bread Company
Los Angeles bakery mentioned for their notably thick (2-inch) focaccia innovation that inspired King Arthur's modern ...
Radio Bakery
Bakery referenced for maximalist focaccia toppings (crème fraîche and mushrooms) that inspired King Arthur's experime...
St. Vito Focaccia
Nashville focaccia restaurant featured in listener question; known for bright, vibrant herb-topped focaccia using deh...
Netflix
Platform for Samin Nosrat's Salt Fat Acid Heat series, which catalyzed mainstream focaccia trend through viral salt-b...
People
Samin Nosrat
Guest discussing her viral Netflix focaccia recipe with salt-brine technique and new focaccia recipe in Good Things c...
Jessica Badalana
Co-host discussing focaccia trends, testing processes, and sharing personal baking preferences and opinions
David Smarkin
Co-host exploring focaccia evolution, technical baking concepts, and personal baking projects
Josie Baker
Consulted by Samin Nosrat to help refine and test her focaccia recipe for accessibility without sourdough starter req...
Lori Ellen Pelikano
Collaborated with Samin Nosrat to refine focaccia recipe for American home bakers without special equipment
Lacey Osterman
Initiated viral 'Will It Focaccia' Instagram trend with experimental focaccia variations (jelly donut, buffalo chicke...
Martin Philip
Visited Radio Bakery and developed focaccia recipe topped with crème fraîche and mushrooms inspired by their approach
Molly Marzella
Developed Carpatka cream puff cake recipe with pastry cream and raspberries featured in David's baking plans
Sarah Jumper
Developed cinnamon roll focaccia recipe combining sweet filling with olive oil and crispy edges
Quotes
"Focaccia went from a bread that used to be just like a sort of fixture of the bread basket of a certain type of mid-priced Italian restaurant of the 90s to a bread that has really captivated bakers"
David Smarkin•Early in episode
"Focaccia is a great entry bread for people who are new to bread baking, which is one reason why it has sort of become so trendy"
David Smarkin•Early discussion
"The salt got completely absorbed into the top of the dough. And so it was in every bite. And I realized that was the difference of what I had never been able to do at home"
Samin Nosrat•Discussing salt-brine technique
"You really have to push the proof on it. When that focaccia is in the pan, you really want to wait until that bread visibly looks very bubbly"
Jessica Badalana•Technical advice section
"Exercise a little restraint. Like, strawberry danish is great. Cinnamon rolls, delicious. But they don't all have to be combined into one"
Jessica Badalana•Jess Opinions segment
Full Transcript
And people really lost their minds about that. The power of visual, of like, of soft light. Beautiful photography. From King Arthur Baking Company, this is Things Bakers Know. I'm Jessica Badalana, King Arthur staff editor. And I'm David Smarkin, King Arthur's editor-director. And today we're talking about a bread that has captured the imagination of Americans everywhere. Actually, people worldwide. Wow, okay. It is. Focaccia. Focaccia. Yeah. You know, it's interesting because I don't think regular people, that is to say people that don't work in a baking company, aren't thinking a lot about trends, right? Trends in baking. They're not hyper-focused on baking trends. They're not laser-focused on baking trends the way we are. But we think about them a lot. And I think one of the things that we noticed was that, like, Focaccia went from a bread that used to be just like a sort of fixture of the bread basket of a certain type of mid-priced Italian restaurant of the 90s. Yes, this is very specific, yes. Yes, to a bread that has really captivated bakers, including us. And you see versions now all over the place. Yeah. So, you become a real canvas, I would say, Focaccia. Yeah. And a canvas for creativity. And I think it's a great entry bread for people who are new to bread baking, which is one reason why it has sort of become so trendy, which is really what we're saying. Focaccia is trendy, and we're going to be exploring that today. I like what you said about Focaccia, like being in the bread basket at a mid-priced restaurant. Tell me a little bit more about that. Yeah, well, yes. I will tell you a little bit more about that. So, when I was growing up, the Focaccia that I knew, I mean, the Focaccia that we knew, really until, like, I would say, maybe like four or five years ago, was kind of like a low-profile, you know, flat bread, maybe a half an inch tall, very tight crumb. It often had, in my experience, like needles of dried rosemary on top. You know, and at those restaurants, I remember it was sort of like the height of fashion they would bring you like the cruettes of olive oil. It was not bread that maybe Americans were super familiar with. Yeah, and I got to say, I think that when people think of Focaccia, now certainly when I hear the word Focaccia, I think of something very different. But I liked that bread back then. I think I would still like it. Well, and I actually think that they're kinder Focaccia. Yeah, and we have recipes for that on our site. And I think that it's probably like a little bit closer to the origins of this bread. So, like, you know, there are, like, Focaccia is a bread that we think of as Italian. And even in Italy, like dating back to the Etruscans, like a very old bread. But I think recent research has revealed that this bread, or Focaccia-like bread, is actually even older than we originally thought, and that it likely dates back to, like, the Fertile Crescent. Like, you know, this is an old bread. It's a flat bread. Right, and those were the first breads. And yeah, and it makes sense. You can, if you put in that context, you know, thinking about the journey Focaccia has gone over the past three million years. You know, starting as a flat bread, I mean, it does make sense that progressively, it has become sort of what it is now, which I think of something pretty tall, really open. Yes. Almost a wet interior. Yes. Something that has a very high hydration. Yeah, I mean, I think. The stereotype of Focaccia in 2026. Yes, it's Focaccia 2.0. So, I think it has evolved, right? And it has evolved maybe away from its sort of roots. And we were really inspired by that here. Like, we were seeing all of these beautiful, you know, I remember seeing, like, Lodge Bread Company in Los Angeles. Like, they have, like, a truly absurdly thick Focaccia. It's like two inches thick and, like, gold and bubbly and olive oil on it. And, you know, they weren't the only people to do it. We were seeing, like, a lot of our favorite bakers around the country, like, messing around with this bread. And we started messing around with it for the big book of bread. Sort of like, okay, we have existing Focaccia recipes, sort of 1.0 on our site. But, like, what is a modern Focaccia? What is Focaccia in 2025, which is when we rolled out our recipe of the year, Focaccia. And it was not the flat, you know, type kind of Focaccia of the 90s. No. It was something very different. And when they started, so they, the test kitchen took our big book of bread formula. Yeah. When we started thinking about, like, will Focaccia be do Focaccia's recipe of the year? So they started with that. And I remember they were, like, tweaking various things. And, you know, it would be funny to go back and look, because I remember those first tests. I was like, great, one and done. Like, this is great. And, like, to go back and look at it now, like, they were, they were wild. They were so big, so puffy. They were so. So it's like the size of a pillow. Like, it's good. Like, they, yes, they were. So those listeners who have heard us talk about recipe of the year before, they know how much testing we do for this and what Jessica's talking about. It's the initial test for our big and boldly Focaccia, which was our recipe of the year 2025. We had a recipe in the big book of bread, which I believe makes a full half sheet tray of Focaccia, which is already big. And it was probably three times the deal of what the recipe is in the big book of bread. Because the question was what, the question we were trying to answer is what is Focaccia in 2025? And the answer is big. Big. And so they went really big. And what my, what, and yes, you and I were like, this is great. This is it. We nailed it. Our colleague Chris, I remember, came around the corner to taste and saw these enormous breads on the table and he had a look of pure beer in his eyes. He was like, and he's the one who was like, I just have to tell you that if I made this for my family, we would panic. Like we would not know how to get through this bread. So we scale back. We scale back. And the recipe now is big and bubbly Focaccia on our site. It's in like a very polite eight by eight square pan. I will say though, I am drawn to the half sheet pan of Focaccia. Because I, my, one of my great loves is a Focaccia sandwich. And one of my greater loves is a slab sandwich, a party sandwich. As you know, I forced you to make party sandwiches than me once, more than once actually. And so I love that you could take a whole, you can do it with eight by eight too and make four sandwiches. But for, you know, okay, maybe six. I can give you one out of an eight by eight. But yes, yeah. Yeah. So I love, you know, like I love that sort of like large format bread to me. It's like, oh, it's exciting. So it varies, but the through line with Focaccia always is that it is ultimately a flat bread, enriched and various stages of hydration. But really, if you have a, it's a, it's a pan bread that's with aloe and dimpled. Yes. Then you've probably got Focaccia. And you know, I was thinking about sort of like this Focaccia rental. Sort of like this Focaccia renaissance that we are talking about the sort of like moment where Focaccia became a trend. And I mean, you can't exactly timestamp it, but I think about, you know, when our friends to me, Nasrat wrote Salt Fat Acid Heat and then subsequently did the Netflix series of the same name. And on that Netflix series, there's a whole episode where she, she makes this Focaccia. And it's the olive oil episode. It's the olive oil episode. Yes. And she makes this Focaccia and she, I mean, it's kind of a wild technique. Like after the dough is in the pan, it gets like a salt brine, which seems crazy. Like you have a bread dough and then you're like just dumping salt to water on top of it. And I think that really like, you know, Samine's a beloved personality and I think people loved that, you know, that series and that episode in particular. And then everyone was making Focaccia. And I think the salt brining was a point of interest and curious bakers, curious cooks were like, oh, I want to try that. Yeah. But I think a lot of people watched it and were inspired to make the Focaccia because they were watching Samine's hands in this oily dough, making these bubbles as you dimple. But you, it's really fun to make Focaccia. It's really fun to make Focaccia. I mean, you just want to do it. Yeah. And you want to get your hands in there and it's easy. Yeah. I mean, it's a really nice entry-level bread that I think everybody could get into. Yeah, it is. And I think about that Focaccia in that episode is like the Focaccia that launched A Thousand Ships. Yes. Which is how we ended up with it as a recipe of the year and how we ended up inviting Samine to come on the episode and talk to us. Yeah. And it's Samine, I mean, what a great guest I mean to have. But I'm just thinking we could have invited so many people on the talk about Focaccia because so many, there's been so much innovation with it. I was going to ask you, where in Portland, Maine, are you eating Focaccia these days? Besides my house. Besides your house, yeah. I do make it at home. I actually hardly ever go out for or buy Focaccia because it is really easy and I think you get excellent results at home. Yeah. Other breads, I'm like, yeah, you know, like it's a time commitment or whatever. Like I'm not making baguettes every time I want a baguette, but Focaccia I will make every time I want Focaccia. Yeah. And where are you in these Focaccia that you're making at home on the toppings? Like are you topping your Focaccia's a lot or are you making them pretty simple? I do not make, I don't top mine in a way that they are approaching pizza. I don't have any like strong objection to that. It's just not what I do. I serve Focaccia usually like either to build a sandwich or as a side dish or something else. So the extent of my topping is like an herb, an olive maybe. I'll mess around with an olive like maybe some slices of lemon, you know, I do sometimes or maybe like cherry tomatoes dimpled in. Okay. But I don't like, you know, I don't go maximalist like we were talking about radio bakery and our colleague Martin Phillip just, he spent a lot of time down there like checking out their Focaccia and inspired by that did one that's topped with crumb fresh and mushrooms. We have a video for that. It's delicious. But to me, then I'm like, well, then you're almost making pizza and that's fine. But that's just usually not how I'm eating Focaccia. That it's maximalist, you know, that is where I think we are right now with Focaccia. That's where in this moment, I think that's what we're talking about, whether it's the height or the way it's topped, how wet it is, how open it is at all about maximalism. Yeah. And the way I was going was specifically to make you mad is this other trend in Focaccia that we've seen recently of just like seeing how maximal we can take it. Can we jelly donut Focaccia? Can we cinnamon roll Focaccia? Can we, you know, obviously, pizza fly Focaccia? This is the trend on Instagram started by a baker named Lacey Osterman who started a trend of asking will it Focaccia? And so all the ones I mentioned, she did jelly donut, she did spicy margarita Focaccia, buffalo chicken Focaccia. I'm going to be honest, I'll speak on this first. They all look delicious to me. I would eat most of those. I don't know if I would do spicy margarita. This is margarita like the drink or margarita like the pizza? The drink. Yeah, I have opinions about this, but I'm going to save it for later. We have a whole segment for my opinions on it. Anyway, can't wait to hear this conversation more about Focaccia with you and Simeone. I went to watch because it had been years since I watched your salt fat acid heat series on Netflix. I think, you know, same since it came out, right? And so I watched the fat episode because it's in the fat episode that you debuted the world, this recipe for this Ligurian style Focaccia, which was not in your first book. It was not in the book. No, it wasn't in the book. It was only in the series. It really came from the show, yeah. And people really lost their minds about that Focaccia. It was the real, you know, the power of visual, of like, of soft light, like beautiful photography. Yeah, I mean, that episode is filmed in... Of shallow depth of field. Yeah. I was filmed in Italy, you know, you're taught how to make this Focaccia by an Italian olive oil maker. And there was something really cool about that Focaccia that really captivated the world, I think, which was the brine. The brine. I'd never seen that either. I had never seen it either. So for people that haven't seen the episode, and they should because it is beautiful, tell us about that method. Yeah. Well, also my own personal relationship to Ligurian Focaccia is that I lived in Italy for two years in my early 20s and I cooked there. And I lived in Tuscany, which where Focaccia is called Schia Cotta. But there was this one bakery that made the Schia Cotta that I could not get enough of. And that's always been sort of my platonic ideal of Focaccia. Then I came back home and I started cooking and baking and I've just never... I'm like, what is it that they were doing there? So then when I got to do this scene with this baker in Liguria and I knew I wanted to make Focaccia, I mean, he was just like the local baker in that town. It was not some well-known person making super special. He was just doing it the traditional way they've been doing it forever. And then he came and I truly had no idea what he was going to do. He showed me how to make dough. Okay, I've seen that. Put a punch of oil in it to be expected. Oil on top. So far so good. Yeah, all good. And then he dimpled it and he made this very salty brine that he poured on top, which kind of blew my mind because the idea of putting water on top of your bread when you bake it. I mean, there is the steaming in the oven, all these things, but it kind of immediately made sense because I have historically always salted a Focaccia with salt before, you know, as it goes in the oven. And that way the salt crystals stay, you know, they typically don't all dissolve. So you get a little bit of the crunch. But this thing that he did, it was like the salt got completely absorbed into the top of the dough. And so it was in every bite. And I realized that was the difference of what I had never, you know, been able to do at home and or like achieve in America. Yeah, and I think it really... It was an Italian secret. It was an Italian secret. And I feel like it, you know, people received it as such. Like it was very, very captivating, you know, for people and still a delicious Focaccia. And I think, you know, we talked in the beginning of the show about my memories of the first time I ate Focaccia, which was like at the, you know, like the mid-priced Italian restaurants of our youth. In the 90s, too. And it was like the age of sundried tomato, pesto, Focaccia. And they were thin, you know, it was pretty thin and it was a pretty dense crumb. And that, I think, is more like that legurin Focaccia from the show. Like it's got a pretty low profile. It's got a pretty tight crumb. No, you know what? It is tight. I don't know how to explain it. It's tight, but it's light. It's tight, but like... Yeah. Yeah. Like it's not the like super fluffy. Yeah, you're right. It's not like super fluffy and open in that way, but it's not a dense bread. And that's in part because it's got so much fat in it. Yeah. I mean, you know better than me, but yes. I mean, I do think, and we've been talking a lot about this in this episode, is like the times they are a change in, the Focaccia times they are a change in. And I think that is actually reflected in the recipe in your new book. Yeah, totally. And I, you know, when I was writing Salt Fat Acid Heat, I just felt like bread, I have such respect for bread baking. And to me, like I have the incredible privilege of living in the Bay Area. Like, there's just... Why ever bake bread? Yeah. I know when there's so many just breads at my fingertips here. So, it didn't, it just felt like it wasn't my place to enter the baked bread baking conversation in Salt Fat in any way, which is why there's no Focaccia recipe. And then it was on the show and it made sense for the show within the context of filming in LaGoria. And I was like, well, I definitely want to have this for people because one of my aims for the show was I wanted it to inspire people to cook in the way that when you watch Chef's Table you're inspired to book a reservation. And so I was like, I knew I had to translate what I had learned in Italy to something doable. So I didn't want a mixer. I didn't want, you know, all the stuff. So I called our friend Josie Baker. Oh yeah. And I asked him and also... Great human, great baker. Yeah, great human. And also my other friend, our other friend, Lori Ellen Pelikano, two great sort of baking minds, and they really like helped me refine and test a recipe that sort of would have the... Would mimic what I had had in Italy, but be achievable with like flour you could buy in America without a mixer, without special tools. And Josie kept being like, are you sure you don't want to make it with sourdough start? I was like, absolutely not because I want it to be for everyone. People have never baked anything. And I do think that's part of why it became a thing that everyone was doing was it was a lot of people's first thing they ever baked. And I think that's the beauty of focaccia is there's not the pressure of like beautiful proofing and shaping. There's not the pressure of a sourdough starter. There's not the pressure. It's a very low pressure. It's so low pressure that often you make it with spent other dough. You know? Right, right. And it's low pressure, but also very delicious. You know, like it's the sort of like labor to reward ratio very high. But your new recipe in Good Things, you're not. So the salt fat acid heat recipe based on the Ligurian one is made with all purpose flour, but the one in Good Things now you're making with bread flour. Tell me about that. That was also because I wanted the first one, the one from the show to be really as achievable as possible for the maximum number of people and not require like a special trip to the store. And so it wasn't worth whatever. I would get a much broader net of people making the focaccia with just a pea flower. And then despite my previous sort of reticence about trying to make my own sourdough starter and bread, I am a human who survived the pandemic. And so I did at some point, I made a starter. I spent probably three to six weeks. It's a blur of a time. Doing this and doing this time. The main thing that I like really came to understand and learn was the value of the turn and the turn. So yeah, which we call it King Arthur's Stretching Folds, but I mean, same thing. And so and like what that can do for a shape and loft. So there was a way where when I saw like what a stretch and fold could do for creating that loft. Combined with what the bread flower was doing, I was like, let me see if I can take this like bread flower thing for the stretch and fold from what I've like practiced in my very brief tenure as a sourdough baker and adapt that into the focaccia still maintaining sort of you don't need a mixer. You don't need all these things. Time out, Tio, because I think there's some interesting things that our listeners might not know about. So a few things. One is that bread flower is stronger, right? Yes. No, I mean, that's but and people may know this. So stronger just means it has more protein and I like to think of it as like more muscles to keep shape. Yeah. Yeah. Well, exactly. Right. And then and then, you know, you so you're starting with a bread that will by its very nature give you a stronger dough and then further strengthening the dough without machine mix. Right. But if you don't want to do a machine mix and you still want to build strength, that's where the time and folds exactly. And the stretch and folds, I think is like, you know, as close to a sort of like no need process as you can get while still getting your hands dirty, you know, so you're getting in there and you're actually just physically pulling up one corner of the dough, stretching it towards the center, plopping it down, turning it and repeating until the dough doesn't want to stretch anymore. Exactly. And then letting it like hang out for a little while and then repeating that process. It's like you're doing the reps. You're doing the reps. You're doing the reps. Yep. You're putting in the work. Exactly. And then you're letting your dough in the Good Things recipe then sit for a long time. A long time, yeah. And then I think, you know, both of both that big and bubbly focaccia of ours and your recipe for focaccia have the tip to like once it's in the pan, you really have to like let it proof. You have to let it rise. Do not let it rise. You've got to let it rise. Yeah. That's really important. Because otherwise you're not going to get like. Everything you've worked for. Exactly. You'll be not for nothing. Yeah. What I love about focaccia is that it is not hard to make and it's, you know, like our big and bubbly focaccia is, you know, it can be made in the afternoon. Yours has the overnight rest. Oh, I want to add that to my list of ones. Try it out. Yeah, try it out. Because it is a pain for mine. It does involve planning. But that, yeah. I mean, but hands off mostly, you know. But just like sometimes you're like, man, I wish I had started that yesterday. I basically always wish that. And I do think it's a bread. I mean, I know that you can revive leftover focaccia, but I do think it is a bread best eaten, like baked and just eaten, inhaled. Yes, I totally agreed. Well, I mean, it's always a treat. Oh, I love you so much. Never enough time, always a treat. No. We love having you on the show. And I love listening to it. Oh, thanks. Thanks. You guys are great. Well, until next time, my friends. Yes, I can't wait. Thanks, guys. I'm Shilpa Oskakovic. And I'm Jazzy Sepcek. And we're the hosts of the Bon Appetit Bake Club podcast. Bake Club is Bon Appetit's community of confident, curious bakers. Jazzy and I love to bake. Some might even call us obsessive. And we love to talk about all the hows and why's and what didn't works that come with it. Every month we publish a recipe on bonappetit.com that introduces a baking concept we think you should know. Then you'll bake, send us any questions you have. And we'll get together here on the podcast to talk about the recipe. So consider this your official invitation. Come join the BA Bake Club. New episodes on the first Tuesday of every month wherever you get your podcasts. Happy baking. This episode is brought to you by King Arthur Bread Flour. So many of our bread recipes and pizza recipes call for bread flour. And here's why. With a higher protein content than all-purpose flour, bread flour gives you strong, stretchy, elastic doughs that proof and bake gorgeously. Buying bread flour on our website or grocery store shelves, just look for the blue flour bag. It's time for our next segment, Ask the Bakers. For Ask the Bakers, we want to hear from you. If you have a baking question for us, head to kingArthurbaking.com. To record a voice message. And we may end up using it on the show. That's kingArthurbaking.com. But you know, we get it. Sometimes you're like in the middle of a bake and you've got a question and you can't wait, you know, for another season of the podcast to have your question answered. You have no patience. You have no patience. You're answering the dough. Yeah. And you need a solution. In those situations, you can always reach out to our Bakers Hotline via phone, email, or online chat. You can go to kingArthurbaking.com. That's kingArthurbaking.com. Or call us 855-371-2253. That's 2253 as in bake. That's our first question. Hello, this is Adrienne and St. Louis. I have a question about focaccia. I recently had a fantastic meal at St. Vito focaccia in Nashville. And what impressed me about their focaccia was the layer of herbs on the top. They remained very bright and vibrant. And I assumed that they added those herbs after the focaccia was baked. Because every time I tried to add them before it is baked, they turned out burnt and unappealing. I'm curious how they did that so that I could replicate it at home. And I'm hopeful that if you called and asked them, they would tell you. Thanks. Well, that's what we did. That's what we did. And this is the focaccia restaurant or the focaccia ria, which is a new word to me, that I had never heard of before until we got this question and looked it up yesterday. Stunning. Beautiful. I mean, I haven't had food there and never heard of this place, but I don't even know if it's real. But it's on Instagram and the focaccia are being beautiful. I mean, I want to eat there. We did reach out to them. They very quickly answered this question. And the answer is that they dehydrate the herbs, a custom herb mix, dried oregano, fennel pollen, parsley, and thyme, that they dehydrate at a very low temperature so as not to burn the herbs. And they sprinkle it on the focaccia after the baked. After it's baked. Yeah. I think that's key. And it's interesting, fennel pollen, that is an ingredient that I think you see a lot in Italian, like Italian country cooking. You see it less in America, but it really gives you that sort of anise perfume to the whole thing. And I wonder, if you wanted to try this at home, I feel like just doing a blend of dried herbs is not the same. Like it's not going to retain that same vibrancy which he talks about. You mean from like the store box. Yeah, if you were to get a dry time and stuff. So I think one option, I've used this with other herbs, and I imagine it would work with this combination that they describe here of oregano, parsley, thyme. You strip the leaves off and you sandwich the leaves between layers of paper towel. And then you dehydrate them in your microwave. Low power burst. And that works pretty well. Like then you get, you know, crunchy leaves and then you could crumble it up if you don't have a food dehydrator, which I do not. But there's other ways, I think, we were, you know, before we got, we heard back from, from St. Vito and thank you, St. Vito, for helping us with this question. You and I were sort of like, well, what would we do if we were in this situation? Because neither of us would have put the herbs on the focaccia and baked it because that's never going to work, you know, especially for focaccia, which bakes, I don't know, doesn't bake at super high temperature, what, like 350 usually, maybe 375. Still 20 minutes, 25 minutes, and it's not going to turn out well. It's not going to work. So you had a, I think we both had some idea, you had a good one that was inspired by our current recipe of the year. Yeah, so the flaky puff crust pizza, the finishing touch for that is a basil and garlic oil. So fresh basil in olive oil, you know, that gets seasoned, then it's got some garlic in it and that gets spooned on after the bake. And then I think it's nice because often focaccia recipes have you adding additional oil, you know, after it's come out of the oven just so you get that beautiful pooling. So you could make a fresh herb oil. I mean, you could even like, if you wanted to be extra, extra read all about it, you could, you know, blanch your basil, dry it and make a basil oil, you know, in like a Vitamix with olive oil and you'd have like a very vibrant green. And you could do that partially to the same technique. Like that would be pretty to look at and really deliver like a very bright, fresh herb flavor. Okay, Collar, well, thank you for that question and thank you for alerting us to St. Bito, a destination we'll have to hit one day. Yeah, Nashville, it's a great food city. So just another awesome place to visit. Let's hear our next question. Hi there, I was wondering how can I get a more open crumb in my focaccia? I think some of this comes down to the formula. Yeah, I think we should start there. I think we should start there. Yeah, I think you're right. I mean, I'm channeling my inner Martin right now where it's like it all starts on the day you're born. But I think that you start in Roman times. It starts with the Etruscans or in the fertile crescent. No, but I think that you want to look for a recipe that's a higher hydration recipe. And I know that there are probably some listeners out there that are like, well, how do I know? And you have to do math. Yeah, a little bit of math. Yeah, so you, let's see. In baker's math, which is what the math we're talking about, it's all a ratio. You're breaking down the ingredients into ratios and it's all based on the total amount of flour. Right. So if there are a thousand grams of flour in this recipe and 80 grams or 800 grams of water or other liquid, then you have an 80% hydration. Because flour is always 100% and everything else gets calculated against the flour. Exactly. So what you would do is you would just, you know, to figure out if it's a high hydration dough, you don't need to, because you can eyeball it a little bit, you know, just like look at the ratio between all the liquid versus all the flour, total up all the flour if there's like 2, if there's like some Alina, add that to the all purpose or whatever. Sure. And if there's milk, I mean, actually there are facaches we haven't even talked about yet, sweet facaches that do are enriched with eggs and milk. If there's milk, water, add that up and then just compare the two. I would say a high, what counts as high hydration, there's no law around that, but I would say 80%. I was going to say that. Yeah. You can reasonably assume that you're going to get a reasonably open crumb with 80% or higher. Yeah. And I think the thing of it is like an 80% hydration dough, if you were say wanting to make a shaped boule or a batard, like might make, you know, a greener bread baker very anxious because it's wet. Yeah, sticky. And it's like, if you dump it out, it's like an amoeba and you're like, how do I, it's sticky. But that's where like, that's where focaccia is so brilliant because you like almost don't even have to touch the dough, you know, like you're mixing it up, it gets puffy, it's really wet, then you're scraping it into your oil pan and you just do the flip ones to get it coated in oil on both sides, but you don't have to touch it a lot. And then when you do touch it to dimple it, your hands are coated in oil, so you're not going to stick. Yeah, it's not sticking like crazy. And the other thing, I mean, this I learned, I just like learned and relearned this lesson when we were working on the breadbook. And I still think about it all the time when I bake bread of any kind, like you really have to push the proof on it. So like when that focaccia is in the pan, like you really want to wait, you know, you want to keep it in a warm place, which is hard in my cold house, you know, I have to actually, you know, work, I sometimes put on like a heating pad or they have those heating mats. And you really want to wait until that bread visibly looks, that dough visibly looks very bubbly and you like give the pan a little jiggle and it should like be almost like a marshmallow. Yeah. And that's the benefit of having a bread that's baked in a pan. Yeah. The risk of overproofing is curbed by the fact that it's in a pan, right? Because, you know, the risk of overproofing a freestanding loaf is that it's just going to kind of, yeah, spread out. Yeah. It's going to lose its shape. Yeah, it'll collapse. But you can push pan breads a little harder. I think that's true. Because they already have some built-in structure. Yeah, I think that's true. You should intentionally overproof all your pan loafs. But like for Kaccha specifically, if you're looking for something really bubbly, you got to wait to see those bubbles. Yeah, you got to wait. And I think, you know, it may take a little longer than you think. But I think those are the two tips. So choose a formula that, you know, favors higher hydration. That'll give you a great start and then give it enough time in a, you know, cozy environment to reach its full potential. Yeah. That's what all I want for myself. Yeah. Enough time in a cozy environment. You're right. That is a life lesson. Just give yourself time to reach full potential. Yeah. Don't rush. Don't rush. Don't rush. There's time. But I think we have one last focaccia-related question. Let's see our next one. I have a great focaccia recipe, but it makes way more than we can consume in one sitting. Do you have any tips for storing focaccia or reheating it so that we can enjoy the day or two later? Thanks. Well, you know my answer to this. Just eat more. Just eat more. Just eat more. Just force your seat. Don't leave that table until the after-catch is finished. I mean, I think there's a few things. If you really wanted to, if you have a recipe that you love, we were just talking about baker's math. You know, baker's math is built on ratios. You could scale it down. You know, so that's option, door number one is scale it down. Yeah. Which I think is a fine thing to do. I mean, option two is look for, you know, a smaller recipe. Like our big and bubbly focaccia is an eight by eight pan. We also have that small batch cheesy focaccia, which is made in a loaf pan, which is a great for like, you know, two people. Yeah. Say you're keeping your recipe that you love, which I hope is from the big book of bread, but I am glad that you have one that you love. Other things that I recommend, I do think that day old focaccia makes a superlative crouton. You know, because it's already got the oil like built right in, you know. So I think that is a great thing to do. I wouldn't like, you know, it's often when I make croutons, I like will assemble a bag of cubed bread in my freezer. And when I have enough of it, I will, I wouldn't do that. I would make croutons the next day and use them up. But, you know, we've been talking a bit about sandwiches, focaccia sandwiches, which honestly, I feel like this could be a focaccia sandwich episode. Very niche audience, but one of the things that I don't know if I would call it a pain point, but like say you have a focaccia sandwich. And you want it to be a hot focaccia sandwich and you don't have like a sandwich press, right? Like the exterior of a loaf of focaccia is like, I mean, it's all crust, right? Like no crumb, it's sort of sealed off. And so when you like go to griddle it, it's kind of, you know, can get like a little greasy and sort of bad, you know, just like one texture, like one solid texture. It's also uneven. Yes. So it's hard to get, you know, if those dimples, those holes, you're not going to get contact with the pan if you're griddling that. So what I like to do, if I'm going to do like a grilled or toasted focaccia sandwich is I, you know, I cut my focaccia in half and then I flip it inside out. So the top becomes, you know, the top becomes the middle, I guess, right? So you have like you're exposing the crumb of the focaccia on both sides of your sandwich. And then, you know, you can butter it or you can oil it up and you'll get like a really, you know, you can toast it in a really nice way or griddle it in a really nice way. And it'll be sort of craggy and delicious. So like the inside out focaccia sandwich, I think is a great thing to do with dale focaccia. I love that. Because it can definitely be revitalized with a toast. Yeah, I mean, yeah. In both these situations, you're reheating the focaccia, either to make croutons or to make a sandwich. And that's a great thing about focaccia. It's full of oil. So when you reheat it, the oil is going to like kind of sizzle on the sides. Yeah, exactly. It's going to help with browning and crispiness really, really nice. Yeah, and then making like a grilled cheese sandwich on inside out focaccia is, that's a trick for the ages. It's so good. A trick for the ages. So please, caller, take my trick from the ages. For the ages. So those are our questions. Thank you, callers. Now it's time for the most important segment of the podcast. Every episode, we like to check in with Jessica to see what wildly surprising and full-throated ideas are in her head. A segment we lovingly call, Jess Opinions. And Jessica, I think I know what your Jess Opinion is going to be this week. You hinted at it early in this episode, but hit me. What's your Jess Opinion about focaccia? Yeah, I mean, I think we're getting back to the will at focaccia. And my opinion is I don't want to find out. I know. I know. And that's not entirely true. You know, as always, here I go to offer a qualifier for it. But I think, you know, I am actually myself, not a huge fan of a sweet focaccia. Okay. I do not want... I think I mentioned this a few minutes ago. It is traditional. There are traditional sweet focaccia. Yes, and I've had the grape-topped ones with sugar. Yes, grapes. And I don't want them. Yeah, I mean, I think it's a fine thing. I don't think it should be banned worldwide, but it is not my thing. But I feel like... I mean, and that, to me, the grape and sugar seems like, you know, very... like a Sunday school picnic compared to what people are doing with sweet focaccia now. Okay, I think I followed you a lot to do a Sunday school picnic. There's like strawberry danish focaccia. And I mean, just because you can put anything into a bread dough does not mean that you should. Okay. I don't think. Like, exercise a little restraint. Like, strawberry danish is great. Cinnamon rolls, delicious. Like, these are all great things, but like, they don't all have to be combined into one. I love the core of this just opinion, which is exercise some restraint, America. And I think I can get with you there, just generally. But on some of these focaccia, I just have to counterpoint this by saying, like I said before, a lot of them look really delicious to me. I don't know if I would personally make a lot of them. I don't think I'm going to be making them more... You're making a spicy margarita one every weekend, aren't you? I'm not. And I just don't think I would go there. However, we did sort of jump on this trend a little bit, and we published a recipe for a cinnamon roll focaccia, another Sarah Jumpow recipe. And I have to tell you, that thing is ridiculously delicious. Really? It is so good. I mean, it's maximal. You're making this cinnamon roll filling, you're putting it in the dimples. There's, I think, maybe a little more sugar. I don't think there's any cinnamon in the dough because cinnamon can inhibit fermentation. And it gets a glaze afterward. It's a lot. But the crispy olive oily edges combined with that sweet cinnamon... I mean, it's... I think it's almost an improvement on cinnamon rolls. Oh, I said you're going to say improvement on focaccia. No, an improvement on cinnamon rolls. I mean, because even though it's decadent, it's also really light because it's focaccia. And even though it's really sweet, it has that kind of bitter edge from the olive oil. So it's very complex and delicious things. So I would encourage listeners to choose a side. You are there, Jessica, side on my side. Well, I'm not there. Team Jessica, team David, and you decide. I do think that recipe has been very well received because there are a lot of people that want to mess around with their focaccia. And I think, you know, sure, like, sure. Yeah, I understand. You're a traditionalist at heart, you know? I think I am. Yeah, I think I am. But I should try it. You know, I should try it and then I will never admit if I was wrong. Okay, I was going to say try to report back. It was not like we were not getting it on the report. I will try it and I will report back in a future episode. So everyone can be on the edge of their seats until then. Yeah, we will put that recipe though for the simmering focaccia. Yes, yes. In the show notes, Anthony our sub-sac, which if you have not subscribed to yet, do that. Yeah, some behind the scenes stuff there. David, what are you going to bake this week? Well, I'm feeling a little desperate this week. Desperate for... It's yet another week of desperation for me. Desperate for warmer weather. I think we're at the point where... This is where I start to get tired of it. I really like the cold. Yeah. I don't like it when it's sort of the year as I kind of like one kind of permise season. It's sort of like in between all year round. I do think though you get to this time of year and sometimes as a New Englander you think, oh, is it just spring just passing us by this year? Well, that's what I... Like not going to stop by? Right. This is the point where it's like, okay, I'm over it now. Like I'm ready. Like this is ridiculous. I'm ready to roll. You know, like let's get some warmth and let's get spring going. So, I'm going to make spring happen with strawberry lemonade bars, which is a very easy recipe. I believe it fits into our bacon easy rubric on the site. And it's just delicious. It's exactly what it sounds like. It's a lemon-flavored bar cookie with a strawberry frosting using dehydrated strawberries. And it's great. And it's pretty. And when I eat one, I will feel a modicum of hope. I think, you know, yeah, I'm also going to bake something sweet this week. I was really excited and inspired by... I love patissue pastries. So cream puffs, profiteroles, eclairs, like... But there was a new to me. I thought I had tried them all. Molly, Marzela, Kelly just developed in our test kitchen for the Carpatka cake, which is a cream puff cake, essentially, that gets split and filled with a pastry... Well, it's actually... I think it's a German buttercream that she filled it with. So it's like a really rich filling. And she added raspberries to her. And I just tried it in passing in the test kitchen as we often do. But it's like, you know, we try a lot of things in the test kitchen just passing through. And there's some things that were like really like lodge in my... Yeah, they stopped you. Yeah. And I've never made that cake before. So it's like always fun to try something new. And I think it could be... I mean, I know some people audition recipes before they make them for like events. I never do. I just go in white knuckling and hoping for the best. But I'm thinking like this could be like a really nice sort of celebration dessert for like spring holidays. It's stunning looking. Anyway, so those are recipes that people might want to try along with us. Great. As always, we appreciate our listeners tuning in to Things Bakers Now. Yes. Remember to like and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, YouTube, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts. So you know when the next episode drops. And you can also share this episode with a friend, maybe somebody you want to make strawberry lemonade bars for you. Yeah. And you can leave us a review while you're there. And when you're baking this week, folks, please, please remember, follow the recipe. Things Bakers Now is hosted and executive produced by me, David Timarkin. And me, Jessica Badalana. Rossi Anastapulo is our senior producer. Chad Chenai is our producer and Marcus Bagala is our engineer. Original music by Megan and Marcus Bagala. Thanks again to our friend, Samine Nassarot, for appearing on today's episode. You can learn more about Samine and her work, including her latest cookbook Good Things at chowsamine.com. Things Bakers Now is a King Arthur Baking Company podcast. Ciao. Ciao.