Sweet with a slight zing, our romesco sauce bursts with rich red pepper, garlic, and smoked spice flavours. It makes these delicious bread swirls impossible to put down – which also makes them perfect for dinner parties.
Notes:
It’s important you don’t let your dough prove for too long the first time, otherwise it’ll become hard to roll out into a rectangle. The dough should be approximately double the size before you roll it out.
These will keep for 1-2 days in an air-tight container at room temperature and you can warm them up in the oven for 5 minutes before serving. Alternatively you can also freeze them for a few months, then defrost and warm up again in the oven.
Have fun with the filling! Sometimes we add a homemade pesto or garlic butter if we want to switch things up a bit.
Romesco Bread Swirls
Serves:12 swirlsPrep Time:Cooking Time:
Nutrition facts:200 calories20 grams fat
Ingredients
For the dough:
450g (15.9oz) strong white bread flour, plus a little for dusting
7g (1.5 tsp) sachet of fast-action dried yeast
salt
300ml (10.1 fl.oz) lukewarm water
olive oil
For the filling:
70g (2.5oz) blanched almonds
2 (160g) roasted red peppers from a jar
2 garlic cloves, peeled
2 tbsp tomato purée
1 bunch of fresh flat-leaf parsley, plus extra for topping
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tsp smoked paprika
olive oil
salt + pepper
50g (1.8oz) pitted black olives, sliced
Method
Add the flour, yeast and 1 teaspoon of salt to a large mixing bowl. Mix, then create a well in the middle and pour in the water and 2 tablespoons of olive oil. Use a spoon to combine the ingredients into a sticky dough, then pour out onto a floured worktop.
Knead for 10 minutes or until the dough stretches easily without tearing, then shape into a ball. Grease the mixing bowl with a small drizzle of olive oil, add the dough and cover with a damp tea towel. Prove for 1 hour or until the dough has doubled in size.
Toast the almonds in a hot pan for a few minutes or until golden, then add to a food processor with the red peppers, garlic, tomato purée, parsley (including any stalks), red wine vinegar, smoked paprika, 2 tablespoons of olive oil and generous pinches of salt and pepper. Process until the nuts have broken down and you have a thick sauce.
Lightly punch any air out of the dough, then flour a worktop and roll the dough into a rectangle approximately 40cm x 30cm (15” x 12”) and a few millimetres thick, then trim the sides to create straight edges. Spread the sauce evenly on top, sprinkle over the sliced olives, then roll away from you from the longest side to create a long log and use a serrated knife to slice into 12 rolls.
Lightly grease a baking tray - approximately 35cm x 25cm (14” x 10”) - with olive oil, then place the rolls in the tray and cover again with a damp tea towel. Prove for 20 minutes.
Preheat the oven to 200°C fan / 425°F. When the rolls have finished proving, bake for 20-25 minutes or until golden.
When you’re ready to serve, brush the rolls with extra olive oil and sprinkle chopped parsley on top.
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I think you mean dough proof not prove. And you should really allow people to leave their website URL along with name and email… it would boost interaction on your site.
Unfortunately we received lots of spam comments when allowed people to leave their website URL but it’s something we’ll look into again, thanks. Also here in the UK we say prove not proof 🙂
Made these yesterday for a picnic and they turned out so well! I swapped the filling for a tomato/garlic paste with veggie nduja and it was delicious! I’d add maybe a little more salt to the dough or to the filling to balance out the dough, but the bread itself came out lovely and fluffy with a lightly crisped crust. Thanks so much!
3 Comments
I think you mean dough proof not prove. And you should really allow people to leave their website URL along with name and email… it would boost interaction on your site.
Unfortunately we received lots of spam comments when allowed people to leave their website URL but it’s something we’ll look into again, thanks. Also here in the UK we say prove not proof 🙂
Made these yesterday for a picnic and they turned out so well! I swapped the filling for a tomato/garlic paste with veggie nduja and it was delicious! I’d add maybe a little more salt to the dough or to the filling to balance out the dough, but the bread itself came out lovely and fluffy with a lightly crisped crust. Thanks so much!