herbalicious tabula rasa

We live in the Antioch area, a town edged by the Delta to the west and thousands of acres of regional park hills to the east. It’s in them thar hills you’ll find the stars of this Provincial flat bread: Wild sage and rosemary.
At our first wild/foraged dinner banquet, we served this bread to show off the lovely sage we foraged in a local regional park.
It’s a stupid-simple recipe, this bread, but it’s a good staple if you want to find an easy way to use some wild herbs you find on your walks, hikes or runs.
Herb flat bread “leaf”
- 1 packet yeast
- 1 tsp sea salt
- 2 sprigs wild rosemary
- 2 sprigs wild sage
- 1 cup water warm enough to proof yeast
- 1 tbs local honey
- 2 tbs olive oil
- several cups of flour, depending …
OK, so start by mixing the honey and yeast in a little bowl with the warm water. Set it aside to foam up a bit
Add dry ingredients in a large bowl, mix it up good enough for the next step. Add oil. Sprinkle in some of those herbs.
Add yeast water … if it’s foamed up, that is (should take 10 to 15 minutes).
Mix, mix until it’s all mixedy mix mixed. Then add flour until it feels knead-able.
Place the dough ball on a well-floured cutting board and knead until it’s nice and springy. Pack it into a ball, then place it into an olive-oiled mixing bowl and cover it with a towel to rise.
… wait for it … and wait … turn on a TV show or something to bide your time …
After 45 minutes or more have passed, preheat the over to 410 degrees.
While the oven heats up, plop the dough onto a newly floured cutting board, knead it a couple times then cut the dough in two.
Take one dough ball and use your palms to flatten it into an irregular oval. Sprinkle the heck outta that oval with your wild herbs. Then take a knife and score a line down the center with a few slanted lines on each side to crudely resemble a leaf.
Do the same for that other dough ball.
Brush both with olive oil, then sprinkle more herbs on top. If you have a salt grinder, crack some salt over the pair of soon-to-be-toasty hot loaves.
Stick ‘em in the oven for 15 minutes or however long it takes to toast ‘em to a golden brown.
Serve stat!
Enjoy!









