Friday, July 22, 2011

La focaccia di Recco

Once you've tried it, you won't forget it. I had my first focaccia di Recco at Manuelina, in Recco. Ever since, I wished to have the chance to eat this delicacy back home, in Singapore, but I just couldn't get hold of the cheese. Leaving aside the fact that in Recco they use a special cheese called prescinseua, which would be completely impossible to find in Singapore, you can obtain superb results with crescenza or stracchino. I made an order of crescenza from Giorgio Ferrari, and 2 weeks later I finally got it. And here I am, now making the so awaited Focaccia di Recco. I must say that it came out as good as I remembered it, and although it came close to Manuelina, it was definitely miles better than the one I had at "Pizzeria al Ponte" in Recco.
 
This is my recipe:
  • 500 gr. Manitoba flour
  • 250 ml. water
  • 100 ml. extra virgin olive oil
  • 8 gr. salt
Stir water, olive oil and salt, then gradually incorporate the flour. Knead for 5 minutes or until smooth, then divide into 4 round balls (this will make 2 focaccias for the first round) and wrap them tightly into cling film. Set aside for 2 to 3 hours at room temperature, or 2 hours in the fridge and one out at room temperature.
 
Now the dough is ready for stretching. Remove the cling film, pat some flour around the dough and flatten it by pushing it with your fingers, until you obtain a flat "pizza" like shape. Do not stretch it or pull it at this point. Now lift the dough, and let it stretch naturally with its own weight, supporting it with your fists (like in the picture above). Keep stretching it, until you lave a large section in the middle that is paper-thin and transparent.
 
Now the sheet is ready for laying on the tray. I used a non-stick pizza tray I bought in Cold Storage.
 
Slowly fit it onto the tray, then cut the crescenza cheese into small pieces and scatter them around the perimeter and in the middle. I used about 100gr of crescenza for each focaccia. Repeat the same stretching exercise on a second piece of dough, then lay it on top of the other, and make the two stick around the edges.
 
Pinch the upper layer with your hands, making holes more or less where you placed the cheese, to allow the trapped air to escape during the baking process.
 
Finally, with the help of a rolling pin, cut the focaccia around the edges, and recollect the residual dough into a ball. It can be reused after resting for 2-3 hours in cling film to prevent it from drying out.

Drizzle with a cap of extra vergine olive oil and some freshly ground black pepper, and it's ready to bake. The focaccia will need to cook in a very hot oven (250C and above), on a hot stone that you will have placed far in advance to ensure maximum heat from below and a perfect crispy base. I used a Ferrari Pizza Oven which gives perfect results.

I must say the 2 weeks wait for the crescenza was well worth waiting for!

14 comments:

LT said...

Hi,

What is Manitoba flour, and where can you buy that? Will normal bread flour do? Thanks.

Anonymous said...

That is awesome..... Where can I get the cheese and the flour from?

amiscell said...

LT - Manitoba flout is Canadian Red SSpring wheat flour. If you are based in Singapore, you can find it in some Cold Storage. I can guarantee they sell it in the one in Tanglin Shopping Centre. The brand is Waitrose, and it is labelled as "Very strong Canadian white flour". You cannot use normal flour as it won't hold the stretch.
Anonymous - I bought the cheese from Giorgio Ferrari (online). The link to the website is mentioned in the post.

LT said...

amiscell,

Thanks. I had guessed it'd be Canadian flour. I checked out Giorgio Ferrari's website for the cheeses. Do they sell retail portions, or it has to be kg and cartons? Thanks for the recipe; I plan to try it.

amiscell said...

LT - You can click on "Order now" and buy online, or download the catalogue and call them for the order. Either way, they sell as little or as much as you like, the only caveat is that the delivery is $30, or for free delivery you need to spend $300. Unfortunately, crescenza is only sold by food suppliers, and no other cheese will work (apart from Stracchino, which is very similar to crescenza).
Great that you are going to try this Italian delicacy! I'd be interested to hear from you how it goes! Make sure that if you don't have the Ferrari oven, you have a very hot over with a baking stone. In that case, I suggest a litle trick: lay baking paper on top of the pizza tray, then lay the focaccia on top. When done, don't insert the whole pizza tray in the oven, just slide in the baking paper with the focaccia on top. This will ensure direct contact of the focaccia with the baking stone, yielding better results.

AdriBarr said...

What a terrific post! Thanks so much - and you did a fantastic job with that dough. Bravo! We emailed a while ago about corzetti - I wanted to share with you my post using a cavarola board - I thought you would appreciate the ancient pasta. You may see it at:

http://thefrontburner.us/main/


Pardon my suing your public forum for my URL. I did not see where to send a private message.

AdriBarr said...

Stelle barbare! Kindly pardon my spelling error - I meant to say "Pardon my using your public forum for my URL" - not "Pardon my suing"!!

amiscell said...

Thanks Adri! Your posts are always amazing and pertinent to the topics on this blog, so please feel free to put your links in my posts comments whenever you have interesting stuff such as the cavarola board.

LT said...

Hi amiscell,

Unfortunately, G+F does not have sufficient orders to bring in the cheeses so my plans to bake this focaccia has to wait.

You can self-collect so that will save the $30 delivery charge if your order isn't enough to qualify for free delivery.

Thanks for the referral, and when I do get the cheese and complete the focaccia, I will let you know and share the outcomes with you.

amiscell said...

I am planning to order some large amounts later this week. if you are interested in getting a couple of pieces, send me your details and I'll order a couple of extra ones for you.

LT said...

Can you send me your email address so that I can get my details to you?

amiscell said...

Please send me an email to: admin@foodieah.com

LT said...

I finally got around to doing this, and the result is deliciously awesome. I OD'ed on carb this weekend.

amiscell said...

LT - That's wonderful! I find that this crescenza is a little more solid than the usual one and it doesn't produce as much water when it melts - so I had to adjust the technique: smaller (but more in number) cubes, more evenly distributed, to ensure an even melt throughout.
I am glad you made it successfully and enjoyed it!

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