• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS

Dish up the simple joy of healthy, down-home foods your family will LOVE… tonight.

Join 12,000+ families served since 2010!

  • Join Now
  • About
    • About Wardee & TCS
    • Our Team
    • FAQs & Help
    • Contact
  • Recipes
  • Blog
    • Recipes
    • Archives
  • Podcast
    • #AskWardee
    • Know Your Food with Wardee (retired)
  • Shop
    • Bible-Based Cooking Program
    • Print Textbooks
    • eBooks & eCourses
    • Recommended Tools & Supplies
    • More Books We Love
    • Complete Idiot’s Guide To Fermenting Foods
      • Errata
  • Login
You are here: Home Ā» Fermenting & Culturing Ā» Sourdough Einkorn Rosemary Focaccia

Want our free no-knead ancient grains sourdough bread recipe? Click here to download it FREE!

Sourdough Einkorn Rosemary Focaccia

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Here's a delicious sourdough einkorn focaccia -- a flat bread that goes great with pasta, soups, sausage dishes, and will even work as a pizza crust. Einkorn is an ancient variety of wheat that many may find easier to eat and digest. | TraditionalCookingSchool.com

My husband is of Italian origin, so Italian comfort food is often found at our table. But as we all know, this wonderful cuisine is often loaded with unfriendly, improperly prepared carbs: something many of us try to avoid.

In an effort to try to adapt a few of our favorite recipes, I’ve been using more and more ancient grains and adapting the recipes with traditional preparation methods such as sourdough. Our most recent recipe redo was focaccia — a flat bread that goes great with pasta, soups, sausage dishes, and will even work as a pizza crust.

I used our sourdough starter in combination withĀ Einkorn flour and soured the dough overnight. If you are not familiar with Einkorn, it is very similar to spelt — it’s an ancient variety of wheat that’s high in antioxidants and a rich source of vitamins. While it does still contain gluten, the amounts are lower than what is commonly found in conventional wheat varieties. Therefore, it can be more on the digestive system and may be easier for wheat-sensitive folks to digest. (We can’t guarantee this, though, and everyone is different — so proceed with caution and listen to your own body.)

I have found one drawback to using Einkorn — my breads are not as voluminous and ā€œpuffyā€ as when conventional ingredients and preparation techniques are used. However, I am willing to settle for a less-than-perfect loaf of bread in exchange for better health, especially when neither flavor or texture have been compromised. The following recipe is very simple; feel free to add seasonings and additional toppings of your choice: fennel, oregano, cracked pepper, gorgonzola cheese, dried olives, etc.

4.17 from 12 votes
Print

Sourdough Einkorn Rosemary Focaccia

This delicious recipe is so very simple; feel free to add seasonings and additional toppings of your choice: fennel, oregano, cracked pepper, gorgonzola cheese, dried olives, etc.

Recipe adapted from Trattoria Grappolo by Leonardo Curti and James O. Fraioli.Ā  Makes 1 loaf.

Course Breads
Cuisine Traditional
Souring Time 8 hours
Servings 4 servings
Calories 290 kcal
Author Jenny Cazzola

Ingredients

  • 1 cup sourdough starter fed within the past 12 to 24 hours
  • 1/2 cup pure water warm
  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil choose avocado oil for Low Vitamin A
  • 3-1/3 cups Einkorn flour
  • sea salt generous sprinkling
  • dried rosemary generous sprinkling

Instructions

Souring:

  1. Combine the starter, the water, the olive oil, and the flour in a large bowl the night before, thoroughly incorporating all of the ingredients.Ā 

  2. Cover and let set overnight or up to 24 hours.

Baking:

  1. Stretch the dough into a large free form rectangular shape on a treated cookie sheet.Ā 

  2. Use your finger or the end of a wooden spoon to make indentations on the surface.Ā 

  3. Sprinkle with salt and rosemary.Ā 

  4. Set pan in oven and heat on the lowest temperature setting.Ā 

  5. Allow it to raise for an hour or until doubled.

  6. When loaf has risen, drizzle with additional olive oil (optional).Ā 

  7. Increase oven heat to 400 degrees Fahrenheit and bake for about 30 to 40 minutes -- until loaf makes a hollow noise when tapped.Ā 

  8. Note that Einkorn tends to bake faster and brown a bit more than regular wheat.Ā 

  9. The flavor and the texture should still be quite good but you may need to adjust your bake time, so watch it carefully.Ā 

  10. To serve, break into pieces.Ā 

  11. Serve with additional oil and salt if desired.

Recipe Notes

  • Italian comfort food!
Nutrition Facts
Sourdough Einkorn Rosemary Focaccia
Amount Per Serving
Calories 290 Calories from Fat 126
% Daily Value*
Fat 14g22%
Saturated Fat 2g13%
Sodium 3mg0%
Potassium 33mg1%
Carbohydrates 36g12%
Fiber 1g4%
Sugar 1g1%
Protein 5g10%
Calcium 5mg1%
Iron 2mg11%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Do you bake with Einkorn? How do you find it works in your recipes?

This post was featured in 30 Traditionally Prepared Einkorn Goodies.

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Posted in: Allergy Friendly Breads, Muffins, & Crackers Fermenting & Culturing Food Preparation Low Vitamin A Recipes Recipes Sourdough

About Jenny Cazzola

Tired of the stress of city life and motivated by a desire to be more self-sufficient, Jenny and her husband decided to trade life in the busy suburbs for life on a quiet country homestead. In the fall of 2012, they moved to an acreage in rural Northeastern Oklahoma where they are learning to live off the land and working to establish a small home grown heirloom produce business. On her blog Black Fox Homestead, Jenny writes about their transition from city to country life, offers tips on natural gardening, recipes from her kitchen, and ideas for frugal, simple living. She and her husband currently share their homestead with four shih-tzus and eight growing Rhode Island Red chicks; but she hopes to see ducks, dairy goats, and possibly a cow in her future.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Erin VL says

    January 28, 2015 at 8:53 am

    Looks deeeelish, Jenny!

    Reply
  2. Stephanie says

    February 16, 2015 at 7:30 pm

    Thanks for sharing, Jenny. I’ve heard of Einkorn wheat; it’s good to know that this ‘older’ wheat variant holds good possibilities for a change in cooking/baking.

    Reply
  3. Gina says

    February 22, 2015 at 11:36 am

    I usually use spelt flour in my baking. Would it work as a substitute?

    Reply
    • Jenny Cazzola says

      February 23, 2015 at 8:05 am

      Yes Gina, it should work just fine!

      Reply
  4. Cathy says

    November 9, 2019 at 3:07 pm

    Iwish I had seen this yesterday. I just started another focaccia recipe rrom the einkorn website. This is a first for me and their recipe xalls for much more flour. If it’s a fail, it will be an expensive fail?. This will be my next try!

    Reply
  5. Cynthia M Sells says

    May 30, 2020 at 1:58 pm

    Why dried rosemary? Can you use fresh? When adding garlic should it be whole cloves?
    I don’t bake with anything else except Einkorn as an all purpose flour. The gluten in einkorn flour is not the same molecular structure as GMO 4 gene wheat that is in everything today. Much more digestible form.

    Reply
  6. Steve says

    September 8, 2020 at 12:20 pm

    Seems like it needs a little more water

    Reply
  7. Wendy Shine says

    September 12, 2023 at 8:26 am

    So treated means? I am going to grease the open with olive oil. Is that okay?
    Thank you.

    Reply
    • Wendy Shine says

      April 14, 2024 at 7:54 pm

      Good question. Maybe parchment? Or butter? Hope thay answer you

      Reply
4.17 from 12 votes (12 ratings without comment)

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Primary Sidebar

Hi and Welcome!

I’m Wardee Harmon and I help Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

…who want to look and feel better, save time and money, and have more energy for enjoying family life and serving Him fully!… like I was. Click here for more…

Recently on the Blog

  • Fizzy Apple Cider Switchel (VAD)
  • VitaClay Review & Buyer’s Guide
  • How to Make Healthy Cookies #AskWardee 006
  • Bean and Barley Soup (Instant Pot, Stove Top)
  • Soaked Spelt Banana Bread (VAD)
  • Ancient Grains 101
  • How to Heal Digestive Issues Naturally (Leaky Gut, SIBO, IBS, Celiac & more)
  • How To Meal Plan In 4 Easy Steps (KYF103)
  • Debunking 4 Sourdough Myths (& How To Overcome Them)
  • How To Use A Pressure Cooker 101

Recently Commented

  • SUE mom divorced on 5 Ways to Take Care of Yourself During Your Period
  • YTmp3 on How To Make Healthy Mild-Tasting Mayonnaise #AskWardee 128
  • Debbie on 45 Real Food Copycat Recipes (Olive Garden, Chipotle & more!)
  • YTmp3 on Homemade Sauerkraut In A Stoneware Crock
  • AJ on Homemade Dog Food In The Instant Pot
  • Ali on Rhubarb Salsa
  • Leif on Amish Butter: Really?

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Before Footer

g-NOWF-glinz

…are what we eat!Ā God’s Natural, Organic, Whole Foods, Grown Locally, In Season.

We love working with other Christian families who love good food and want to eat according to God’s design…

Not only because we believe it’s the healthiest way, but because we want to give Him glory for creating good food as the best medicine!

Learn more about GNOWFGLINS here…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOcH27DM1dI

Eat God’s Way Cooking Program

Our Eat God’s Way cooking program is for Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

…who want to look and feel better, save time and money, and have more energy for enjoying family life and serving Him fully!

Join 12,000+ families served since 2010! Learn more here…

Copyright © 2025 Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS • About • Help • Privacy • Partners

Rate This Recipe

Your vote:




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

Recipe Ratings without Comment

Something went wrong. Please try again.