EASY OVERNIGHT FOCACCIA WITH ROSEMARY, KALAMATA OLIVES, AND GRANULATED GARLIC

(Sorry for not having a picture. But if you want to see what focaccia looks like, you can bring up my other focaccia recipes. All focaccias actually look pretty much alike.)  

This must be the easiest homemade bread recipe ever invented. No stand mixer required, no killing your hands by kneading the dough for several minutes, plus no worry whether you added too much or too little flour to the mix. This recipe is practically fool proof. OK, you could mess it up if you left it in the oven too long, or didn’t use instant yeast, or forgot to add the salt. That kind of error. But if you follow the instructions to the letter, you simply can’t go wrong.

And this focaccia is just so amazingly tasty. And chewy. Perfect with Italian food or anytime a nice hunk of bread would be perfect with soup or stew. No butter or dipping sauce required. It is simply perfect as it is.

So, I’m going to make this post short and sweet today. I want you to have time to go into your kitchen, mix these marvelous ingredients together, put the whole mess in your fridge, and walk away until tomorrow.

So, until tomorrow, or whenever I have the strength to post again, may you stay happy, healthy, and well informed. And as a small aside: to any underinformed out there who mainly get their news from FOX, just perhaps it might be time to broaden your horizon. There is a whole lot of tragic “stuff” going on in Washington DC that might even affect you. Especially if you are a veteran, work for any kind of agency that was created for the betterment of all (both state and federal), care about state and national parks, have even the tiniest belief that science is not a hoax, are retired and depending on social security and Medicare or Medicaid to fund your old age, or have even the smallest consideration for those less fortunate than yourself. You need to open your mind to the reality of what is currently happening to our democracy. Read what the historian Heather Cox Richardson has to say. Listen to NPR (National Public Radio). Tune into PBS NewsHour and CNN. And after learning about what is really going on you feel things have gone too far, you might consider sending a message stating your dissatisfaction to your favorite Republican congressman or woman. They need to do the job they were hired to do. That being – to defend the Constitution and try to do the best they can FOR EVERY AMERICAN CITIZEN. THERE JOB IS NOT TO JUST SIT BY AND ALLOW ANY PRESIDENT AND HIS BILLIANAIR BUDDY OR BUDDIES DESTROY OUR BELOVED COUNTRY! And in doing so, destroy all the good we as Americans have done for other nations. Remember, we are just a small part of planet earth. We can’t just think about ourselves. So, please take a stand for democracy and the greater good of all mankind.

Peace and love to all. (Or at least, most of you!)

4½ c. bread flour, fluffed

2¼ tsp. kosher salt

2¼ tsp instant yeast

¾ tsp. granulated garlic

5 tsp. finely minced fresh rosemary

1¼ c. roughly chopped kalamata olives

2¼ c. lukewarm water

extra virgin olive oil

In a medium sized bowl, whisk the flour, salt, instant yeast, granulated garlic, rosemary, and chopped olives together. Add warm water. Using a rubber spatula, mix until the liquid is absorbed, and the ingredients form a sticky dough ball. Rub the surface of the dough with olive oil. (Use enough that the dough won’t dry out as it sits in the refrigerator.)

Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and place in the refrigerator for at least 12 hours or up to 24 hours.

Pour about 3 tablespoons of olive oil into a half-sheet (18×13-inch) rimmed baking pan. Remove the dough from fridge and using a stiff spatula, transfer the dough to the baking pan and form it into a rough ball. Roll the dough ball in the oil to coat it all over, again forming a rough ball.

Let the dough rest uncovered for 3 to 4 hours or until it looks about doubled in size.  

Set a rack in the middle of the oven and pre-heat the oven to 425-degrees. Press the dough as much as possible into an even thickness and into the corners of the pan. (The dough will slip back to the center but spread it out as best you can.)   

Bake for about 25 minutes, or until the underside is golden and crisp and the internal temperature of the bread reaches at least 200-degrees. 

Remove from oven and transfer the focaccia to a cooling rack. Let it cool before cutting into small squares. Serve warm or at room temperature.

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