by Jenise » Fri Jun 17, 2022 8:56 am
So, the after-report: Based on my test batch and then rethinking the quantity, I decided to increase the dough to better fill an 11 x 17 pan. So 3 and 2/3 c flour became 5, and everything else increased by the same ratio except the yeast in better support of a slow/cold rise, even if fractionally. The dough went into the fridge at 10:30 p.m. and off we went to bed, with the alarm set for 7.
Where I laid awake most of the night.
Awake, obsessing about my dough (and eventually the sleep I wasn't getting). Two things bugged me: I had decided to divide the dough between two glass bowls. In the largest bowl I have, the original recipe hits it's head on the ceiling of the cling film and I usually end up leaving some dough behind there. To avoid that, two bowls--but wait, I couldn't mix the finished doughs, and side by side in the pan I'd end up with an unsightly seam. After many hours I worked out that I should dump the smaller bowl upside down on top of the larger bowl, so the surface with the heavy olive oil would be the new upper side, then dump the big bowl upside down into the baking pan. Now there would be no seam, or if there was it would be horizontal and undetectable to the eye. This manouver, stupid or genius, was all it takes to keep me away on a project I'm deeply committed to. Oh, and the second bugger, was that when I removed the dough from the KA mixing bowl whose dough hook doesn't effectively reach the bottom of the bowl*, I found some unincorporated flour and crusty bits of insufficiently mixed dough ended up in one of the glass bowls. I picked those out by hand, but wasn't sure I got all the crusty bits. What if those didn't bake out? Doesn't take much to ruin my night. Toss turn, toss turn, get up and feed BabyGURRRL more baby food, go back to bed, toss turn toss turn toss turn.
*You guys here pointed out to me the adjustment on the KA machine. Problem is that the screw is in there so tight we can't budge it so we've never been able to re-adjust for the dough hook (the height is fine with the regular mixing attachments, essentially my hook is short.)
At 6:30 I gave up on sleep, turned off the alarm and got up and went to attend my dough. Once in the baking pan, I covered the top with halved castelveltrano olives, dried oregano, salt and cracked pepper, and put the pan in the warming drawer to spread and rise--I held my breath for the next two hours. At 9:00, it looked gorgeous, got the final douse of olive oil and went into the oven.
It had time to cool before getting wrapped in parchment for the trip to Van. The result was beautiful. Big holes, chewy, and the incredible unique crunchy crust that this recipe produces that's like no other focaccia I know. Could not have been better.
And now I have two recipes, one for the larger pan, and the knowledge that I can make this dough overnight. Hurray, hurray. But what a way to do it.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov