Recipe: No-Knead Breakfast Focaccia (2024)

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Grace Elkus

Grace Elkus

Grace Elkus was the Deputy Food Director at Kitchn, where she wrote a monthly vegetarian recipe column called Tonight We Veg. She received her culinary arts diploma from The Natural Gourmet Institute.

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updated May 1, 2019

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Recipe: No-Knead Breakfast Focaccia (1)

A crispy, fluffy sheet pan focaccia featuring sunny side up eggs, crumbled bacon, and lots of cheese.

Serves9Prep4 hoursCook30 minutes

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Recipe: No-Knead Breakfast Focaccia (2)

I like to think of this playful recipe as the best way to serve bacon, eggs, and toast to a crowd. The crispy, fluffy focaccia combines everyone’s favorite breakfast trifecta into one, so that all that’s left to do is grab some plates and pour the coffee.

No-Knead Dough Makes the Easiest Homemade Focaccia

This crowd-sized sheet pan focaccia is inspired by our easy skillet focaccia, in which the food processor mixes up the dough for you. If you’re new to bread-making, this recipe is a great place to start; you’re rewarded with an impressive, fluffy focaccia without doing much work at all. In fact, a no-knead dough is actually the best way to make focaccia, because it prevents too much gluten from developing (which can result in tough, chewy bread).

In my opinion, the tastiest focaccia features super-crispy top and bottom crusts and a soft, airy interior. To achieve this, you’ll generously oil the sheet pan, transfer the dough to the pan, then flip the dough so all of it is shiny and coated with oil. Baking the focaccia in a super-hot oven (475°F) crisps up the oiled crust.

How to Bake Eggs into Your Sheet Pan Focaccia

Think of breakfast focaccia as a super-sized egg-in-a-hole: Each generous square serving boasts a sunny-side up egg. For set whites and runny yolks, the eggs only need about eight minutes in the oven, meaning the focaccia itself needs to get a head-start.

After the dough has risen in the sheet pan, you’ll preemptively make the wells for the eggs so that the dough bakes with egg-sized indents. (If you cracked eggs onto a flat focaccia, they would run all over the place). After about 20 minutes in the oven, you’ll pull out the lightly browned focaccia, crack the eggs into their wells, scatter the whole thing with cooked, crumbled bacon and lots of shredded cheese, then return to the oven for the eggs to cook.

A crispy, fluffy sheet pan focaccia featuring sunny side up eggs, crumbled bacon, and lots of cheese.

Prep time 4 hours

Cook time 30 minutes

Serves 9

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 4 1/4 cups

    all-purpose flour

  • 1 (1/4-ounce) packet

    active dry yeast (about 2 1/4 teaspoons)

  • 1 tablespoon

    plus 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, divided

  • 1 3/4 cups

    warm water

  • 5 tablespoons

    extra-virgin olive oil, divided, plus more for oiling the bowl

  • 8 strips

    bacon (about 5 ounces), cut in half

  • 9

    large eggs

  • 6 ounces

    sharp cheddar cheese, grated (about 2 cups)

  • 1 ounce

    finely-grated Parmesan cheese (about 1/2 cup)

  • Freshly ground black pepper

  • 2 tablespoons

    chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley leaves

  • Ranch dressing, for serving (optional)

Instructions

  1. Place the flour, yeast, and 1 tablespoon of the salt in the bowl of a food processor fitted with the blade attachment and pulse to combine. Add the water and 2 tablespoons of the oil and pulse until a rough ball of dough forms, 12 to 15 pulses. The dough will be very sticky.

  2. Lightly oil a large bowl. With floured hands, scoop the dough out of the food processor and form it into a ball. Place in the bowl and turn to coat. Cover with plastic wrap or a kitchen towel and let sit in a warm place until doubled in size, 1 1/2 to 2 hours.

  3. Drizzle the remaining 3 tablespoons of oil onto an 13x18-inch rimmed baking sheet. Punch down the dough, transfer to the baking sheet, and turn to coat the dough in the oil. Use your fingertips to stretch the dough to the edges of the baking sheet. Cover again and let sit in a warm place until puffed, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Meanwhile, cook the bacon.

  4. Place the bacon in a single layer in a large skillet over medium heat. Cook until just crisp, 3 to 4 minutes per side. Transfer to a paper-towel lined plate.

  5. Arrange a rack in the middle of the oven and heat to 475°F. Using the bottom of a flat-bottomed 1/4-cup measuring cup, make 9 evenly-spaced wells in the dough (this will be for the eggs), then use your fingers to make the wells even more defined. Sprinkle the dough with remaining 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt.


  6. Bake until the focaccia begins to brown, 15 to 20 minutes. Remove from oven. Press the same measuring cup in the wells to make them even deeper. Crack 1 egg into a small bowl, then carefully pour into one of the wells. Repeat with the remaining eggs. Crumble the bacon over the focaccia, then sprinkle with the cheddar and Parmesan. Season with lots of freshly ground pepper.

  7. Return to oven and bake until the egg whites are just set and the yolks are runny, 7 to 9 minutes more. Garnish with the parsley and season with more salt and pepper, if desired. Serve with ranch for dipping if desired.

Recipe Notes

Make ahead: The dough can be left in the covered bowl to rise overnight in the refrigerator — the slower rise actually provides extra flavor. In the morning, transfer the cold dough to the rimmed baking sheet and allow it to warm up a little, about 30 minutes, before stretching and proceeding with the recipe.

Storage: Leftovers can be tightly wrapped in plastic wrap and refrigerated for up to 4 days.

Filed in:

Baking

Bread

Breakfast

Cheese

herbs

Nut-Free

Recipe: No-Knead Breakfast Focaccia (2024)

FAQs

What is the best flour to use for focaccia? ›

Use your favorite kind—I prefer extra virgin olive oil. Bread Flour or All-Purpose Flour: I tested this focaccia with both and prefer the bread flour variety. Both are great, but bread flour has a higher protein content so it yields a chewier texture.

Why is my focaccia not fluffy? ›

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.

Can you eat focaccia for breakfast? ›

Made with water, flour, salt, yeast and extra-virgin olive oil, when focaccia is consumed correctly and in the right amount, it's a great alternative to breakfast pastries and commercially baked goods like sweets and cookies.

What ingredient makes bread soft and fluffy? ›

Adding sugar weakens the gluten structure, absorbs water, and eventually makes the bread lighter and softer. As a result, sugar improves the bread's taste, structure and texture. Yeast also eats up sugar to produce carbon dioxide, which raises the dough and makes bread fluffy.

Can I use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour for focaccia? ›

Bread flour is slightly higher in protein than All-purpose, so gives the focaccia just a little more chew. I love the mix of both, but just AP flour works just fine too! See FAQ for using only AP flour in the recipe if that is what you have. Yeast - I used instant yeast in this recipe.

Should focaccia be thin or thick? ›

The thickness of a focaccia can vary, too, but an authentic focaccia genovese should be rather thin, even if it needn't be quite as thin as my version presented here.

What is the trick to fluffy bread? ›

Potato Flakes or Potato Water

Starch helps the dough by trapping the gas from the yeast in the dough and makes the bubbles stronger. This helps the bread to rise and be lighter and fluffier.

Can you over knead focaccia? ›

Tips for the perfect homemade Focaccia.

Don't over-knead your dough– In the first step, make sure the dough has come together enough that it's sticky but not smooth, this will help to make the much desired air bubbles.

Why did my focaccia turn out so dense? ›

Oven temperature: If the oven is too cold, it can lead to dense bread as it doesn't heat the gases in the dough enough to make them expand and rise. Preheat the oven and don't leave the door open too long when placing focaccia inside. This ensures the oven is nice and hot.

Do Italians eat focaccia for breakfast? ›

In Liguria, locals refer to classic plain focaccia as focaccia della mattina (morning focaccia) because tradition calls for having it alongside the morning cappuccino in lieu of a sweet pastry and actually dunking it into the cappuccino.

Is focaccia healthier than regular bread? ›

A moderate consumption of focaccia bread can be healthy. It is because complex carbs in focaccia offer the body energy slowly and help control blood sugar levels. In addition, it gains an advantage if it contains whole wheat flour. It is also rich in vitamin, mineral, and fibre content.

How do bakeries get their bread so soft? ›

There's something magical about the bread you get at your local bakeries - they're always sooo soft and fluffy. Many of these breads, especially packaged ones, are made with a ton of chemical additives such as calcium propionate, amylase, and chlorine dioxide which help keep them soft, light, and fluffy for days.

Does letting bread rise longer make it fluffier? ›

Does Rising Bread Affect Its Texture? For a fluffy bread texture, the key is to let the bread rise long enough.

What is the best flour for focaccia 00? ›

Using plain flour, as in Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, or even finer “tipo 00” flour as in The River Cafe Classic Italian Cookbook, will give you a softer, more tender crumb; while Richard Bertinet's mixture of strong bread flour and coarse semolina in his book Dough creates a more robust, ...

What is the best flour for baking bread? ›

While bread flour is the best option, it can sometimes be used if you don't have bread flour. “Check the protein content,” advises Chef Jürgen, since it can vary from brand to brand, and an all-purpose flour that contains protein on the higher end of the range, 12 to 13 percent, will produce a better outcome.

Which flour makes bread rise the most? ›

Wheat flours are usually the first choice of most bakers. This is due to the lightness and high rise created by higher levels of gluten content. However, if you're intolerant of wheat or looking for gluten-free bread options, there are a wide range of low gluten and gluten-free flour options available.

What flour is best for bread making and why? ›

Strong or bread flour has a higher protein level that plain flour. It is this protein that contributes to the strength of the gluten. However, this is where it gets complicated. Looking for flour labelled as 'strong' or 'bread' flour is a good idea when you are just starting out on your bread making journey.

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