500g flour
450ml lukewarm water
.5 tsp sugar
1.5 tsp salt
11g pack of dry yeast
Olive oil (a drizzle or three)
This bread is kind of freaky. It requires no kneading, and gives the impression of being completely wrong until it actually emerges from the oven. It’s really, really, really easy to make.
Mix all your dry ingredients together in a warm bowl.
Pour the water in and mix everything together with your hands (I just use one hand because it gets very sticky). Your dough at this point will look more like batter.
This is kind of hard to explain – ‘pull’, ‘stretch’ and ‘slap’ the dough, picking it up in handfuls and slamming it back down into the bowl. Scrape the bottom of the bowl as you go, slapping and slopping. This aerates the dough and after five minutes the texture will be noticeably smoother and silkier.
Drizzle olive oil over the surface – about a tablespoon or two. Put some cling film over the bowl and leave it in a warm place to rise.
After an hour your dough will probably have risen a lot. It may even be touching the surface of your cling film. This is good.
Get the oven going at 200°C. Pour your puffed-up batter into a large baking tin (one with walls) lined with baking paper and throw it in the oven.
30 minutes in the oven. Just keep an eye on the bread. It will develop dark spots, and eventually the surface will become a lovely brown colour.