• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • eBook
  • About
  • Contact me
  • Privacy Policy
Family-Friends-Food
  • All Recipes
    • Breakfast
    • Soups & Starters
    • Main Dishes
      • Vegan
      • Vegetarian
      • Fish
    • Side dishes & Salads
    • Baking & Desserts
  • Holiday Recipes
    • Chanukah
    • Purim
    • Pesach
    • Lag Ba’Omer
    • Shavuot
    • Rosh Hashanah
    • Succot
  • Healthier Jewish Food ebook
  • Get Updates
menu icon
go to homepage
search icon
Homepage link
  • EASY SWAPS FOR HEALTHIER JEWISH FOOD
  • SPECIAL DIETS EBOOK
  • BREAKFAST
  • SOUPS & STARTERS
  • MAIN DISHES
  • – VEGAN
  • – VEGETARIAN
  • – FISH
  • SIDES & SALADS
  • BAKING & DESSERTS
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • PRIVACY POLICY
×
Home » Side dishes & Salads » Home baked olive focaccia

Home baked olive focaccia

This page may contain affiliate links, which won't change your price, but may share some commission. For more information, please visit my Privacy Policy page.

Jump to Recipe - Print Recipe

This easy-to-make Italian style olive focaccia is a soft & slightly chewy bread with a wonderful flavour. A delicious savoury snack for adults and children alike.

We recently returned from a wonderful short break in Venice. I’d never been there before and it was fascinating – so much to see, so beautiful, and such delicious food!

A small shop in Venice, open-fronted, stacked with brightly coloured fresh fruit and vegetables. The stall-holder stands on the left of the photo reading a book.

On this page...

Toggle
  • A visit to the Ghetto
  • Kosher Italian
  • Missing recipe!
  • Olive focaccia ingredients
  • Helping hands
  • Delicious results
  • Pre-schooler approved!
  • Olive focaccia
  • More delicious Italian recipes

A visit to the Ghetto

One day we walked from our hotel near Piazza San Marco all the way to the old Jewish Ghetto. My daughter Kipper was an absolute star and walked the whole way, enjoying herself immensely looking at the shops and market stalls we passed en route. By the time we got there she was definitely ready for a snack, and we found a tiny kosher bakery offering a range of delicious looking baked goods.

She chose a slice of olive focaccia, which we had thought we would all be able to share. However, almost before I’d turned around she’d devoured the whole thing! She was pretty hungry, but it was INCREDIBLY DELICIOUS. 

Kipper standing in front of the Jewish bakery in the Venice Ghetto, eating a slice of focaccia.

Kosher Italian

At the Jewish Museum, I bought a kosher Italian cookery book – La cucina nella tradizione ebraica – which I am having fun deciphering with the help of google translate. So far we have encountered such lost-in-translation gems as, “put the beans in the bathroom the night before…” and, “of course you already soaked raisins and shredded cedar.” Eek!

Missing recipe!

Tragically, the book didn’t include a recipe for olive focaccia (although there is one for raisin focaccia, which looks interesting). So in order to make it at home we had to look elsewhere. I found a recipe for ‘classic focaccia’ online, in Italian, naturally, and google translated it. We made it pretty much as written, except for the addition of 200g of pitted olives on the top. 

Overhead view of olive focaccia.

Olive focaccia ingredients

The ingredients were all fairly straightforward. We are a household that is never without olives, so we had everything on hand! To make a delicious olive focaccia yourself, you will need:

  • flour
  • instant yeast
  • sugar – to feed the yeast
  • salt
  • olive oil 
  • warm water
  • olives – of course!

Olive focaccia ingredients - flour, olive oil, water, yeast, olives, sugar and salt.

Helping hands

Kipper was very keen to help in the preparation of this focaccia, although most of the hard work was done by the mixer. She helped with the weighing out, and of course with the positioning of the olives prior to baking. She was also extremely keen to sample the finished product. Repeatedly!

Slices of olive focaccia on a striped wooden cutting board with a breadknife, seen from above.

Delicious results

The focaccia was soft, slightly chewy, almost cakey in texture, with a wonderful olive flavour. DH thought it should have been ‘thicker’ so I may make a slightly smaller size rectangle from the same amount of dough next time. Personally, I thought it was just right. The crusts were golden and crisp with the olive oil and the occasional flake of coarse salt added an extra dimension of yumminess. 

Stacked slices of olive focaccia seen from the side.

Pre-schooler approved!

We took most of the olive focaccia to Kipper’s woodmice group, where ravenous pre-schoolers, appetites whetted by an hour of woodland exploring, scoffed it down alongside their baked potatoes and spicy apple juice. That’s what I call a picnic!

This made one focaccia, approximately 22 x 30cm in size.

Home baked olive focaccia - soft, chewy and delicious.

Want deliciously easy, family-friendly recipes like this one delivered straight to your inbox? Click here to sign up. (Of course, I’ll never pass on your email address to anyone.)

📖 Recipe

Slices of olive focaccia on a striped wooden cutting board with a breadknife, seen from above.

Olive focaccia

Prevent your screen from going dark
This easy-to-make Italian style olive focaccia is a soft & slightly chewy bread with a wonderful flavour. A delicious savoury snack for adults and children alike.
5 from 1 vote
Print Recipe Pin Recipe Save Saved!
Prep Time 20 minutes mins
Cook Time 25 minutes mins
Rising time 1 hour hr 30 minutes mins
Total Time 2 hours hrs 15 minutes mins
Course Bread, Side Dish, Snack
Cuisine Italian
Servings 8
Calories 233 kcal

Ingredients
 
 

  • 350 g plain flour
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 7 g instant dry yeast (approx. 2 tsp)
  • 2 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil + extra for greasing
  • 210 ml of warm water

For the topping

  • 2 tablespoon olive oil
  • 200 g pitted olives
  • coarse salt

Instructions
 

  • Mix the flour, salt, instant yeast and sugar.
  • Add the warm water and oil, and mix until the dough is smooth and elastic - easiest done in a stand mixer using the dough hook.
  • Cover the bowl and let the dough rise for about an hour in a warm place.
  • Meanwhile, liberally grease a 22 x 30cm (or thereabouts) baking tray with plenty of olive oil.
  • After an hour, knock back the dough and knead briefly (about a minute) then pat into the prepared tray. Cover and let rise for 20 minutes.
  • Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F).
  • Drizzle the remaining olive oil over the dough and press in the olives at regular intervals. Sprinkle over the salt. Allow to rise for a final 10 minutes.
  • Bake at 200°C (400°F) for 25 minutes until risen and golden brown.
  • Allow to cool, cut into squares and serve.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Olive focaccia
Amount per Serving
Calories
233
% Daily Value*
Fat
 
8
g
12
%
Saturated Fat
 
1
g
6
%
Sodium
 
536
mg
23
%
Potassium
 
66
mg
2
%
Carbohydrates
 
36
g
12
%
Fiber
 
2
g
8
%
Sugar
 
1
g
1
%
Protein
 
5
g
10
%
Vitamin A
 
98
IU
2
%
Vitamin C
 
1
mg
1
%
Calcium
 
20
mg
2
%
Iron
 
2
mg
11
%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Keyword bread, olive, olive oil
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

More delicious Italian recipes

If you like home-made Italian food, why not have a go at this pesto, mushroom and asparagus pizza, this delicious peperonata, this asparagus carbonara with sun dried tomatoes, or this loaded cheesy breakfast focaccia.

Short on time? You can make awesome quick and easy focaccia in just one hour!

Slices of olive focaccia on a board.

More Side dishes & Salads

  • Fingers hold a spoon which is scooping up some marinated mushroom salad from a plate.
    Marinated Mushroom Salad
  • A blue and white bowl of salad comprising lettuce, griddled peach slices, crumbled feta and toasted pecans, seen from above.
    Grilled Peach Salad with Pecans and Feta
  • Overhead image of a dark coloured bowl of cold sesame noodles, topped with a generous amount of fresh coriander (cilantro), sliced spring onions (scallions) and a sprinkle of black and white sesame seeds, on a woven mat. Chopsticks are visible to the right of the bowl.
    Easy Sesame Noodles – cold, noodly deliciousness
  • Overhead image of challah panzanella salad in a white china bowl on a wooden table, showing pieces of toasted challah, tomatoes, cucumber, spring onion, and olive, garnished with fresh basil. A white cloth napkin is to the left.
    Challah Panzanella Salad – a fresh and delicious dish with a Jewish twist!
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • Email

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Bessie Regal

    July 18, 2018 at 5:27 pm

    Sounds delicious, and I’m not even a bread kind of person. I must try this one.

    Reply
    • Helen

      July 18, 2018 at 8:39 pm

      Thanks Bessie! I hope you enjoy it 🙂

      Reply
  2. Brenda Kaldenbach

    March 14, 2018 at 8:23 pm

    Your step one says baking powder, while I thought focaccia was made only with yeast. Is this a typo? Sounds good though.

    Reply
    • Helen

      March 14, 2018 at 8:30 pm

      Well spotted! Thanks Brenda – yes it was a typo and I’ve corrected it. Thanks again for pointing it out.

      Reply
  3. Lucy - BakingQueen74 (@Bakingqueen74)

    January 15, 2015 at 8:05 pm

    It sounds so delicious, and I would much rather use your recipe than translate from Italian, even though I work in the translation world!

    Reply
    • FFF

      January 15, 2015 at 8:44 pm

      I’m finding all the translating quite fun (and quite funny) at the moment. No doubt the novelty will wear off soon…

      Reply
      • Sandro

        May 25, 2017 at 12:01 pm

        I found you through the original Italian recipe!
        If you want/need some help with the translations just contact me, I’ll be more than glad to help 🙂

        Reply
        • Helen

          May 25, 2017 at 12:08 pm

          Thanks Sandro! So kind of you to offer ?

          Reply
  4. Janice (@FarmersgirlCook)

    January 15, 2015 at 1:17 pm

    Fabulous, I just adore olives in bread. Oh I adore olives and I also adore bread, so a no brainer for me!

    Reply
    • FFF

      January 15, 2015 at 1:28 pm

      I think that was pretty much Kipper’s take on this too!

      Reply
5 from 1 vote (1 rating without comment)

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Primary Sidebar

Find Recipes

About Helen

Hello! And welcome to Family Friends Food.

I’m Helen, Jewish mum, flexitarian kosher cook, and food blogger, and I love to share meat-free, delicious recipes with a British Jewish twist. Take a look around and see what you can discover!

Learn more about me →

TEA FUND - THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

All my cooking, recipe-writing, photography, research and more, is fuelled by TEA. So every cuppa you provide is very much appreciated! ☕️

Newsletter Archive

Browse through past email newsletters here.
 

Featured Posts

An unseen diner plunges a spoon into a bowl of creamy chia pudding with yogurt, topped with strawberries, blueberries and raspberries.

Chia pudding with yogurt and extras! A super healthy breakfast

The 'tablets of the law' surrounded by grapes and wheat stalks.

Shavuot – all about the joyful Spring harvest festival

Fabulous Feta Cheese Recipes

Foodies100 Index of UK Food Blogs   Copyright © 2026 Family-Friends-Food · Log in

Rate This Recipe

Your vote:




Let us know what you thought of this recipe:

Delicious recipe - I'll make it again!
My family loved this!
Thank you for sharing this recipe

Or write in your own words:

A rating is required
A name is required
An email is required

Recipe Ratings without Comment

Something went wrong. Please try again.