Focaccia w/ Pork, Apple & Apricot Filling

CELEBRATING LABOR DAY!

Once again, the last long weekend of summer has arrived. Here in Canada, families with school age children, take it as the last chance to travel before the end of summer. Others enjoy the company of family and friends at barbecues, picnics, fairs, festivals and fireworks displays. Canadian football fans may spend a large portion of their weekend watching the Labor Day Classic matches live on television. Whatever your choice of relaxation is, you know good food will be a part of the holiday.

This stuffed focaccia came into my thoughts for a tasty choice. If you’re barbecuing, it can be wrapped in foil and heated on the grill. If a picnic is your preference, add a nice potato salad (or salad of choice) and of course, a beer. Perfect, easy and delicious!

I can’t quite remember when my love for ‘sandwiches’ began. I have memories of my brother and I having cold, leftover mashed potato sandwiches with my mother’s homemade bread after school. To me, anything is fair game for making a sandwich with.

The sweet potato focaccia I’m using in this recipe is adapted from the Focaccia Pugliese idea using the regional tradition of adding mashed potatoes to the yeasted dough for focaccia. The result is worth the extra effort — yeasty and spongy with a delicious tenderness and crusty edge.

Regional cuisine in Italy is a big deal. Focaccia recipes differ in many regions: Liguria, Puglia, Sicily, each region has its own version. Every tiny little village in Italy has its own recipes and everyone has their own ideas on how you should cook this or that.

Puglia’s cuisine is a mirror to its soul, simple yet flavorful, and deeply rooted in local produce. Its unique location ensures an abundance of seafood, and its fertile land blesses it with high-quality vegetables, grains, and olive oil.

The bread dough is not difficult to work with, it stretches easily to make focaccia pockets. This recipe is another idea that I developed into handheld stuffed focaccia pockets for picnics or lunch on the go. It consists of sweet potato focaccia filled with pork, apple & apricot filling. What’s not to love!

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Focaccia w/ Pork, Apple & Apricot Filling
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Rating: 5
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Servings
POCKETS
Servings
POCKETS
Votes: 1
Rating: 5
You:
Rate this recipe!
Instructions
Filling
  1. To a skillet add butter & melt. Add onion, apples, celery & spices as well as salt & pepper. Sauté until vegetables are tender. Add garlic & cook until fragrant, 30-60 seconds. Remove from pan.
  2. Place ground pork in skillet & cook, breaking it up into small pieces, until no longer pink. Drain on paper towel. Return to skillet & add veg combo along with apricots & grated cheese. Set aside until ready to use.
Focaccia
  1. In a large bowl, combine yeast, 1/2 cup flour & 1/2 cup lukewarm water. Allow to sit for about 20 minutes until frothy.
  2. Cook & mash sweet potato; add it along with the remaining 3/4 cup lukewarm water, 3 Tbsp olive oil, 1 1/2 tsp salt & 4 cups flour. When dough forms, knead for about 7-8 minutes until the dough is soft & satiny. Place dough in a greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap & allow to rise in a draft fee place until doubled in size, about an hour.
  3. Preheat oven to 375 F.
  4. Spread work surface with olive oil. Place risen dough on it & roll out to about 1/4-inch thickness. Cut into 12 pieces. Form each piece into a ball. Roll each ball into a 6-inch circle. Divide filling between 6 of the circles leaving a border on each one. Top each one with remaining circles of dough. Pinch edges to seal in filling.
  5. On 2 parchment lined baking sheets, place filled focaccia. Sprinkle with dried rosemary & coarse sea salt if using.
  6. Bake for about 20 minutes or until slightly browned. Remove from oven & cool on wire racks.

Turkey w/ Bacon & Stuffing Focaccia Pockets

It always amazes me how some simple foods can taste so incredible. Focaccia is one of those foods, it has few ingredients, yet it’s almost magical how great it tastes! Focaccia is not pizza and is about 2000 years older, a sort of missing link between traditional flat bread and pizza. Above all it is distinctly Italian. Focaccia has undergone many upgrades and evolutions; however, the basic recipe has remained unchanged.

Today, focaccia is a flat oven-baked Italian bread similar in style and texture to pizza. The interesting part, however, is that Focaccia started out as a side dish but over time it became part of the main dish as sandwich bread. If we go further back in time, focaccia was the only star of the show and was originally the prototype of early pizza.

A few years ago, Brion & I got ‘hooked’ on focaccia bread. I experimented with various recipes until I landed on the sweet potato focaccia. Experiment no more! For our liking this was the ultimate focaccia. Of course, I couldn’t just leave it at bread. My next thought was to make it into handheld stuffed focaccia pockets for picnics or lunch on the go.

Today, I’d like to share my newly ‘developed’ focaccia pocket. It consists of sweet potato focaccia filled with roast turkey, bacon & stuffing served with cranberry sauce on the side. We just loved this ‘next level’ of focaccia bread.

Print Recipe
Turkey w/ Bacon & Stuffing Focaccia Pockets
Instructions
Filling
  1. In a skillet, cook bacon until just crisp, then remove to a paper towel lined plate to drain; chop when cooled. Remove all but 1 Tbsp of the bacon drippings from skillet.
  2. Add butter to the skillet, sauté onions, garlic & mushrooms with herbs & spices, scraping up any brown bits, until the onions have softened & mushrooms have lost most of their size & moisture. Stir in the bacon & shredded cooked turkey, taste for seasoning. Cook for another minute or two, then remove from heat & set aside.
Dough
  1. In a large bowl, combine yeast, 1/2 cup flour & 1/2 cup lukewarm water. Allow to sit for about 20 minutes until frothy.
  2. Cook & mash sweet potato; add it along with the remaining 3/4 cup lukewarm water, 3 Tbsp olive oil, 1 1/2 tsp salt & 4 cups flour. When dough forms, knead for about 7-8 minutes until the dough is soft & satiny. Place dough in a greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap & allow to rise in a draft fee place until doubled in size, about an hour.
Boursin Sauce
  1. In a saucepan, melt the butter over low heat. Stir in the spices. Add the milk and adjust heat to steaming -- do not simmer or boil. Add Boursin to the milk mixture, break it up into pieces with the side of a large spoon and stir until Boursin has melted into the mixture. Remove from heat. Add to turkey/veg mixture.
Assembly/Baking
  1. Preheat oven to 375 F.
  2. Spread work surface with olive oil. Place risen dough on it & cut into 12 equal pieces. Form each piece into a ball. Roll out each ball into a 6-inch circle. Divide the filling between the 12 circles of dough. Top each one with about a 1/4 cup stuffing. Fold to form a turnover & pinch edges to seal in filling.
  3. On 2 parchment lined baking sheets, place filled focaccia. Sprinkle with dried rosemary & coarse sea salt if using.
  4. Bake for about 20 minutes or until slightly browned. Remove from oven & cool on wire racks. Serve with cranberry sauce on the side if desired.