Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (2024)

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This Homemade focaccia bread recipe is easy to make, naturally vegan, flavorful and truly the best! Top this soft and pillowy yeast bread with cherry tomatoes, garlic, olives, fresh rosemary sprigs, and sea salt or any flavors you like to create your own favorite focaccia!

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The Best vegan Foccacia bread

A versatile basic focaccia recipe that requires just a few simple ingredients should definitely not be missing here on the blog! It is not only very simple but also a great swap for classic baguette, Indian vegan naan or traditional bread. It makes a perfect accompaniment to salads or various hearty dishes with a Mediterranean flair. However, I also like to reheat a piece in the oven just for a quick snack whenever I feel a little hungry. Not only the smell of freshly baked homemade focaccia but also the taste is amazingly delicious so please give it a try!

Use your favorite Toppings

Feel free to experiment with countless options for toppings. I used cherry tomatoes, olives, and fresh rosemary to top the focaccia, however, feel free to sub in your favorite toppings. Caramelized red onion or fennel would be lovely, as would sun-dried tomatoes and thyme, perhaps with a drizzle of honey or agave? Mmmm. The possibilities are endless!

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Easy Homemade Focaccia Bread

If you’ve never baked bread before, please don’t be intimidated by the idea of making your own homemade dough! Basically, you only need six simple pantry ingredients to make this focaccia dough. And yes, you do need to work with yeast and use a rolling pin to make this focaccia, but I promise it’s EASY! Please keep in mind though, that you’ll need to let the dough rest and rise for about an hour before you’ll bake it, so you’ll want to make sure you plan accordingly.

Also, another pro tip: Make sure you check the expiry date on your yeast. Sounds obvious, I know, but the yeast is essential for the bread to rise and give you a light, airy, open-crumb focaccia as a result. I’m certain you’ll nail this easy recipe on your first attempt. You’ll never go back to store-bought focaccia again!

Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (4) Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (5)

Ingredients for vegan focaccia bread

To make this homemade bread dough, all you need are six basic pantry staples. It’s all-purpose flour or bread flour, sugar or agave syrup, active dry yeast, olive oil, salt, and warm water. The toppings are totally customizable, depending on your favorites or what you have at the moment. Red onion, black or green olives, cherry tomatoes or sun-dried tomatoes, fennel, fresh herbs like rosemary or thyme and flaky sea salt would all be lovely. You do you!

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How to make the vegan focaccia bread

Step 1: Making the yeast dough

The bread dough comes together very easily. First, whisk together the flour, sugar, yeast, and salt in a large mixing bowl. Add the water (make sure it’s lukewarm) and olive oil and combine everything together with a spatula or wooden spoon until the mixture comes together.

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Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (8)

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You’ll then transfer it on to a working surface and knead with your hands (or use a stand mixer with a dough hook) for about 10 minutes until a smooth dough forms.

Pro Tip: The dough should be more on the wet side. Resist the urge to add more flour if it’s stickier! – More flour will result in denser focaccia.

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Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (14)

Shape the dough to a ball and place it in a lightly oiled bowl. Let the dough rise covered in a warm place (for example, the inside of your oven with the light on or by a sunny window) for about an hour or so, until it has nearly doubled in size.

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Step 2: Assembling the focaccia bread

Next, turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface, and roll it out into a large rectangle or circle until the dough is about 1/2-inch thick. Then place it in an oiled baking tin or baking sheet, making sure you stretch it all the way to the corners with your hands. Finally, cover the pan, and let the dough continue rising for another 20 minutes.

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Now for those gorgeous dimples on our easy vegan focaccia! Punch deep holes (all the way to the bottom) into the focaccia as you can see in the pictures above. Add your toppings of choice, you’ll want to nestle them into the focaccia. Drizzle 1-2 tbsp of olive oil evenly all over the top of the dough, and sprinkle with salt and paprika. Bake the focaccia for 20 minutes at 400 F, or until the bread is nice and golden on top for the best aroma and flavor. Drizzle with a little more olive oil, slice, and serve warm.

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Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (22)

Finally, serve this focaccia bread with a dash of olive oil on the side, drizzled with balsamic vinegar and generously sprinkled with salt, freshly ground pepper and more fresh herbs. This is a fuss-free recipe that is a sure-fire crowd-pleaser. Vegan or not, everyone is going to love this focaccia bread!

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This best vegan focaccia bread is:

  • Vegan
  • Plant-based
  • Dairy-free
  • Egg-less
  • Easy
  • Homemade
  • Hearty
  • Infused with
  • Soft & Fluffy
  • Flavorful
  • So delicious!

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Looking for more homemade dough recipes? Make sure to check out the following:

  • Vegan Naan Bread
  • Homemade Tortillas Recipe
  • Aloo Paratha (Indian Stuffed Flatbread)
  • Spinach Tortillas
  • Best Pizza Dough
  • Vegan Pasta Dough

If you try this best vegan focaccia bread recipe, please leave me a comment and rating. Your feedback is always very helpful for me and other readers. And if you take a photo of your delicious fluffy yeast bread, please make sure to tag me on Instagram @biancazapatka and #biancazapatka because I love seeing your remakes! Happy baking! 🙂


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Vegan Focaccia Bread Recipe

Author: Bianca Zapatka

This Homemade focaccia bread recipe is easy to make, naturally vegan, flavorful and truly the best! Top this soft and pillowy yeast bread with cherry tomatoes, garlic, olives, fresh rosemary sprigs, and sea salt or any flavors you like to create your own favorite focaccia!

5 von 22 Bewertungen

Print Pin Review

Prep Time 10 minutes mins

Cook Time 20 minutes mins

Resting Time 45 minutes mins

Course Appetizer, Lunch & Dinner, Side Dish

Servings 8 Servings

Ingredients

  • 4 cups (500 g) all-purpose flour or bread flour
  • 2 tsp sugar or agave syrup
  • 2 ¼ tsp (7 g) instant dry yeast
  • 1 ½ tsp salt
  • 1 ⅓ cups (320 ml) warm water about 110°F
  • 1 tbsp olive oil plus more to drizzle

Toppings (optional)

  • cherry tomatoes
  • olives green or black or mixed
  • 2 rosemary sprigs or other dried herbs of choice
  • 2 tsp flaked sea salt
  • pinch of smoked paprika powder

Instructions

*Note: Check out the recipe video + step-by-step-photos in the blog post above!

  • Whisk together the flour, sugar, dry yeast, and salt in a large mixing bowl.

  • Pour in the water and olive oil, then stir everything together with a spatula (or wooden spoon) until the mixture clumps together. Transfer to a working surface.

  • Knead with your hands (or use a food processor with dough hooks) for about 5-10 minutes until a smooth dough forms. (If the dough is too sticky, add more flour but try to use as less flour as possible if you want a soft focaccia).

  • Shape the dough to a ball and place it in a lightly oiled bowl. Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel and place in a warm location (I set mine by the sunny window) and let it rise for 45-60 minutes, or until the dough has nearly doubled in size.

  • Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface, and roll it out into a large rectangle (or circle) until the dough is about 1/2-inch thick (*see notes). Place in an oiled baking tin (*see notes) or large baking sheet, making sure you stretch it into the corners with your hands. Cover the pan, and let the dough continue to rise for another 20 minutes.

  • Preheat oven to 400°F (around 10 minutes before the dough has finished rising).

  • Press deep holes (all the way to the bottom) into the focaccia with the back of a wooden spoon or with your fingers, as you can see in the pictures above. Then, press the cherry tomatoes, olives and rosemary into the focaccia. Drizzle 1-2 tbsp of olive oil evenly all over the top of the dough, and sprinkle with salt and paprika.

  • Bake for 20 minutes, or until the dough is slightly golden and cooked through. Remove from the oven, and drizzle with a little more olive oil if desired.

  • Slice, and serve warm.

Notes

  • I used a 13-inch x 9-inch x 2-inch (33cm x 22.9cm x 5.08cm) baking tin.
  • Different people have different preferences on the thickness of their focaccia. If you want yours thinner, just roll it out a little more or roll it out a little less if you want yours thicker.
  • For information on how to freeze yeast dough or to see a video on how to make yeast dough, check out my vegan naan recipe (click here).

Nutrition is calculated automatically and should be used as estimate.

Did you make this recipe?Mention @biancazapatka or tag #biancazapatka!

IF YOU HAVE PINTEREST, YOU CAN FIND ME HERE AND PIN THE FOLLOWING PICTURE, IF YOU LIKE! 🙂

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©Bianca Zapatka | All images & content are copyright protected. Please do not use myimages without prior permission. If you want to republish this recipe, please link back to this post for the recipe. More info here. Thank youfor supporting biancazapatka.com!

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Vegan Focaccia Bread (Best Easy Recipe) (2024)

FAQs

What is the best flour for focaccia? ›

Flour - I used a mixture of bread flour and All-purpose flour (high grade or strong and plain if you're not in the US). 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!

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.

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.

Should focaccia be thin or thick? ›

Traditionally Tuscan focaccia is medium thick and medium soft but crispy on the outside. Salt and rosemary are its usual companions. However, throughout Tuscany you can also find a thin and crispy version as well thick and very soft. Tuscan panini with cheese and cold cuts often use focaccia for a base.

Should you punch down focaccia dough? ›

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.

What is the trick to fluffy bread? ›

Add Sugar

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.

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.

What makes the fluffiest bread? ›

Well it's simple, bread flour has an increased amount of protein or more gluten which results in a lighter, fluffier dough which produces a less dense finished product. All-purpose flour can be used for bread but bread flour is always better if your goal is a “fluffier” bread.

Can you put too much olive oil in focaccia? ›

EXPERT TIP: It may feel like you are adding excessive amounts of olive oil during the making of this bread. Don't worry, the bread can take a lot of olive oil, and not only helps in enhancing the taste, but it also keeps the bread from sticking to the pan and helping the top to brown perfectly.

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.

What is the best pan to bake focaccia? ›

Because there is a greater edge-to-middle ratio when you bake focaccia in a loaf pan instead of a sheet pan (not to mention the loaf pan has higher sides), you're ensured a lot of crispy, cheesy bites.

What pan is best for focaccia bread? ›

Baking sheets give a thinly crunchy bottom. Cast-iron pans (put in the oven) give more of a nuanced crunch. Our favorite cooking vessel for focaccia is a baking stone lightly sprinkled with semolina flour. This creates a softer bottom crust with slight crispness.

What is the best pan to cook focaccia in? ›

I like to use a straight-sided 9 x 13-inch metal baking pan for this recipe, but a Pyrex 9 x 13-inch baking pan will do in a pinch. Before you start on the recipe, be sure to read all of the tips at Baking Together #28: Making and Baking No-Knead Focaccia.

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

I love rosemary focaccia, so I use fresh rosemary, but you can try a different blend of herbs if you'd like to (or leave them out and just make garlic focaccia). Flour: All-purpose flour or bread flour is perfect for making focaccia bread.

Which type of flour is best for bread? ›

AP flour can provide adequate structure to delicate bread doughs while keeping them soft and plush. There are some exceptions to this rule: BA's Best Bread recipe calls for AP flour—specifically King Arthur all-purpose flour, which contains 11% protein (higher than most other brands)—but makes a hardy, crusty loaf.

Which flour is best for yeast breads? ›

For best results, base your yeast dough on wheat flour — only wheat-based flour provides the type and amount of protein yeast dough needs to support its structure. Whole wheat flour, white whole wheat flour, bread flour, or all-purpose flour are all good choices.

What is the best Italian flour for bread? ›

Farina 1 or 2

Even coarser than the previous types, these soft wheat flours are best used for bread and pizza.

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