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Nutrition: per serving

  • kcal267
  • fat6g
  • saturates1g
  • carbs46g
  • sugars0g
  • fibre3g
  • protein9g
  • salt0.18g
    low
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Method

  • step 1

    Put the grated courgettes in a colander and sprinkle with 1 tsp of the salt. Leave to stand for 20 mins, then, using your hands, squeeze out as much of the moisture as possible. Rinse the courgettes thoroughly, then squeeze again.

  • step 2

    Heat 1 tbsp of the olive oil in a frying pan and cook the onion and garlic for 4 mins until softened. Add the mushrooms and cook for a further 4 mins until softened and browned, then add the courgettes and cook for another 2 mins. Strain well and set aside to cool; discard the liquid.

  • step 3

    Heat oven to 220C/fan 200C/gas 7. Place the flour in a large mixing bowl, stir in the yeast, the remaining oil and salt, the basil and the courgette mixture. Mix well to combine. Make a well in the centre and add 125ml hand-hot water. Mix well to form a slightly sticky dough. Knead on a floured surface for about 10 mins, then shape into a ball and place on a greased baking sheet.

  • step 4

    Flatten the ball of dough very slightly with the palm of your hand and loosely cover with oiled cling film. Leave to rise in a warm place for 25-30 mins until doubled in size. Brush the top of the dough with a little water, then sprinkle with the sea salt and bake for 40 mins until golden. Leave to cool on a wire rack before serving.

Recipe from Good Food Vegetarian Christmas, December 2006

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Comments, questions and tips (59)

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Overall rating

A star rating of 4.3 out of 5.52 ratings

simonelauralee

It turned out like foccacia. I had no problems with courgettes, sizes or wetness, just squeezed them a lot . Couldn't really taste the mushrooms. The dough was very very wet, so kneading by hand was a sticky business, but it rose and was fluffy and very well received. Served with butternut squash…

ABaxter35

A star rating of 1 out of 5.

Dreadful recipe. As an experienced bread maker you have to be specific on quantities and "medium courgette" is totally useless. The bread was a disaster, soggy, unrisen. Would not recommend even trying. Will not bother trying to improve either

peterdavid196911Cv-4uAG

Hi could you let me know your recipe for bread please someone once told me many years ago but have lost the recipe shame as it was fantastic bread I remember letting it prove for a good few hours. I would really appreciate your recipe many thanks

jenclews avatar

jenclews

A star rating of 3 out of 5.

I weighed my courgettes as '3 medium courgettes' could be anything from 300-500g! Mine were 450g, so I upped the flour by 50g and still added the 125ml of water. It is a wet dough, but wet doughs tend to make softer, more open crumb so it's worth persevering. Rather than add more flour (if kneading…

manevitt

I love what you have done and will follow your instructions instead. I am by no means a professional bread maker, but I have made enough bread to know that this recipe is very wet. I imagine it will be hard to handle. I like the idea of caramelised onions and sun-dried tomatoes and will most likely…

Lullaby Melodia

A star rating of 5 out of 5.

Made this in my bread maker. After reading other reviews I didn't add any water at all. I didn't have any mushrooms so left those out and added a handful of mixed seeds instead. The bread was delicious, my son loved it too.

misccold

Excellent recipe. I make it in a bread maker. The water quantity required depends heavily on the courgettes, type, freshness, how well you managed to drain them. The draining is critical. I usually don't need to add any water at all. Never add flour - just use less water if the courgettes are very…

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