I served this at the Dessert Exchange I hosted on 1/16, and several people had requested the recipe, so here it is. This recipe is based on the potato-based focaccia dough from Cook's Illustrated (I believe
Best Recipe) combined with the idea of oil-poached garlic from Rose Levy Beranbaum's
Bread Bible.===
Peel a large potato or two small ones (you need about 9 oz. / 250g peeled) and cut into 1-inch chunks. Cover with cold water and bring to a boil, then lower heat to simmer for 15-20 minutes until tender. Save 1 cup of the water.
Next peel one large head of garlic, and cut large cloves into marble-sized chunks. Place garlic in a small saucepan and cover with olive oil. Simmer on
very low heat (You want it to be just barely bubbling or the garlic will get bitter; I use a heat diffuser on our gas stove) for ~10-15 minutes until garlic is tender. Remove from heat.
In a stand mixer combine
3 1/2 cups unbleached all purpose flour (17.5 oz / 500g)
1 1/2 tsp yeast [edit: specifically, use instant]
1 1/4 tsp salt
With the motor running, add the 1 cup of potato water (ideally still warm, but not so hot it will kill the yeast) and mix briefly. Rice or mash the potato, and add it to the mixer along with 2 tbsp of the garlic-infused olive oil, and then mix on low speed until the dough comes together in a shaggy ball, about 2-3 minutes.
Transfer the dough to an oiled (use some of the reserved garlic oil) rising container, turn over to coat, cover, and allow to rise in a warm place for 35-45 minutes until not quite doubled in size. It will rise very quickly because of the warm potato and water.
With wet hands, pinch the dough ball in half, and place both halves on a rimmed cookie sheet in puddles of olive oil (about 1 tbsp per round). Gently shape the dough into two rounds. Drizzle a little more oil on top, cover loosely with saran wrap, and allow to rise in a warm place again, another 35-45 minutes.
Preheat the oven to 425 during the second rise, with a shelf in the middle. You can use the top of the oven as your warm place to rise the dough.
Once the second rise is complete, poke holes in the top of the dough with a wet finger, spreading out the dough a bit so its flatter. Next tuck a chunk of garlic into each hole. Drizzle the remaining olive oil over the top of the dough, allowing some to puddle in the holes and around the outside, and then sprinkle with fresh rosemary leaves and coarse sea salt.
Bake for 23-25 minutes until the top crust is golden brown, then allow it to cool a little before slicing (although maintaining any delay before devouring it is very hard!) Total time start to finish is about 3 hours.
===
At the dessert exchange, I made a double batch of this recipe, which will just barely fit in my 6 quart mixer. I baked both sheets at the same time, switching high-and-low sheets halfway through. They needed and extra 3 or 5 minutes to get fully browned (I left one sheet in slightly longer.)
Last edited by
Chouxfly on January 22nd, 2011, 10:39 am, edited 1 time in total.