Tag: Focaccia Sandwich

  • Green Chile Chicken Melt on Focaccia

    Green Chile Chicken Melt on Focaccia

    Some meals know where they come from.

    They carry a place in them. Not loudly. Not as decoration. Not as some culinary costume put on for effect. But quietly, in the way heat rises from a pan. In the way cheese softens over chicken. In the way green chile announces itself without needing permission.

    This Green Chile Chicken Melt on Focaccia belongs to that kind of food.

    It is practical. It is warm. It is simple enough for a weekday, but it still feels like somebody cared. Chopped or shredded chicken. Roasted green chile. A little mayo or sour cream to pull it together. Pepper Jack or Monterey Jack melted over the top. Red onion for bite. Focaccia to hold everything with enough backbone to matter.

    This is not a delicate sandwich.

    It does not need to be.

    It is the kind of sandwich that understands hunger as more than appetite. Sometimes hunger is the body asking for warmth. Sometimes it is the mind asking for something familiar. Sometimes it is the quiet part of you saying, “Please, just make something good enough to bring me back into the day.”

    And that is what this sandwich does.

    Green chile has a way of making food feel awake. It brings heat, yes, but not just heat. It brings depth. Earth. Smoke. A little sharpness. A little memory. It makes the chicken more interesting. It makes the cheese more necessary. It turns a simple melt into something with a sense of place.

    And the focaccia matters here.

    Soft bread would surrender too easily. Focaccia holds its ground. It has chew. It has oil. It has salt. It understands that a sandwich with melted cheese and warm chicken needs a foundation strong enough to carry the weight.

    That is the quiet lesson of this meal.

    Warmth needs something to rest on.

    So does a person.

    After a week of BBQ, slaw, and sweet peach cobbler, this sandwich begins a new rhythm. Not a hard reset. Not a performance. Just another step back into the kitchen. Another meal made from ordinary things. Another small act of feeding yourself, like you are still worth the effort.

    Because you are.

    Even on the tired days.

    Especially then.

    Green Chile Chicken Melt on Focaccia

    Ingredients

    For the chicken filling

    • 1 ½ cups cooked chicken, chopped or shredded
    • ½ cup roasted green chile, chopped
    • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise or sour cream
    • 1 teaspoon lime juice, optional
    • ½ teaspoon garlic powder
    • ¼ teaspoon onion powder
    • ¼ teaspoon cumin, optional
    • Salt and black pepper, to taste

    For the sandwich

    • 1 large piece of focaccia, sliced in half horizontally
    • 3 to 4 slices of pepper jack or Monterey Jack cheese
    • Thinly sliced red onion
    • 1 tablespoon butter or olive oil, for toasting
    • Optional: extra green chile, pickled jalapeños, or cilantro

    Method

    1. Make the chicken filling

    In a bowl, combine the cooked chicken, roasted green chile, mayonnaise or sour cream, lime juice if using, garlic powder, onion powder, cumin if using, salt, and black pepper.

    Stir until everything is coated.

    You are not trying to drown the chicken. You are trying to bring it together. The mixture should be moist enough to hold, but not so wet that it turns the bread soft before the heat comes into play.

    Taste it.

    If it needs more chile, add more chile. If it needs salt, give it salt. If it needs a little brightness, add a bit of lime.

    Food usually tells you what it needs if you slow down long enough to listen.

    2. Prepare the focaccia

    Slice the focaccia in half horizontally.

    If the bread is thick, press it gently with your hands or remove a little from the inside so the filling has somewhere to sit.

    Focaccia is strong, but even strong things need room.

    3. Build the sandwich

    Layer the bottom half of the focaccia with cheese.

    Add the green chile chicken mixture.

    Add thinly sliced red onion.

    Add another slice of cheese if you want the sandwich richer.

    Place the top half of the focaccia over everything and press gently.

    Not hard. Just enough to remind the sandwich that it has a job to do.

    4. Toast the melt

    Heat a skillet over medium heat. Add butter or olive oil.

    Place the sandwich in the skillet and press it gently with a spatula, another pan, or a sandwich press.

    Cook for about 3 to 4 minutes per side, until the focaccia is golden and the cheese has melted.

    If the bread browns too quickly, lower the heat. Melting cheese takes patience. So does returning to yourself.

    5. Rest and slice

    Let the sandwich rest for a minute before cutting.

    Slice in half and serve warm.

    This is good with chips, a simple salad, sliced cucumbers, pickles, or the corn, tomato, and cucumber salad coming later this week.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    Use roasted green chile if you can. Fresh-roasted is beautiful, but canned or jarred green chile will still do the job. This is home cooking. Use what you have to make the meal.

    Pepper jack brings more heat. Monterey Jack keeps it mild and creamy. Both belong here.

    Sour cream adds a little tang to the filling. Mayo makes it richer. You can use either. You can also use a little of both if you are the kind of person who believes peace is sometimes found in compromise.

    If your green chile is watery, drain it before adding it to the chicken. Too much liquid will make the sandwich heavy in the wrong way.

    Red onion gives the melt bite and color. Slice it thin so it does not take over.

    For extra heat, add pickled jalapeños. For freshness, add cilantro. For more richness, add a little extra cheese and accept who you are.

    What to Serve With It

    This sandwich marks the start of the next Salt, Ink & Soul food arc.

    It brings heat, cheese, chicken, and bread.

    On Friday, the meal needs something bright beside it: Corn, Tomato, and Cucumber Salad. Something fresh. Something colorful. Something with enough acid and crunch to cool the heat without dulling it.

    Then, on Saturday, it can bring relief: No-Bake Lemon Icebox Pie. Cold, sweet, simple, and kind.

    Together, the week becomes:

    Heat. Brightness. Relief.

    A meal does not have to be complicated to have structure. Sometimes it only needs to know what each part is there to do.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

  • BBQ Chicken Focaccia Sandwich

    BBQ Chicken Focaccia Sandwich

    Smoke, Sweetness, and the Work of Making Lunch Matter

    Sometimes a sandwich is just a sandwich.

    Bread. Meat. Cheese. Sauce. Something sharp enough to wake it up. Something soft enough to make it feel like comfort.

    But sometimes a sandwich becomes more than that. Not because it is fancy. Not because it needs a chef’s explanation or a long speech about technique. Sometimes it becomes more because it arrives at the right moment — when the body is hungry, the mind is tired, and the day has asked for more than it gave back.

    This BBQ Chicken Focaccia Sandwich is built for that kind of day.

    It is rich, smoky, a little sweet, and just sharp enough around the edges. The chicken carries the barbecue sauce. The smoked Gouda melts into it like memory. The red onion brings bite. The pickles cut through the richness and remind the whole thing not to take itself too seriously.

    And the focaccia holds it all.

    That matters.

    Some breads just exist around a sandwich. Focaccia participates. It has weight. It has chewed. It has oil, salt, and a little stubbornness. It does not disappear under the sauce. It stands there and says, “I was part of this, too.”

    This is not a complicated meal. It does not need to be. It is the kind of sandwich that lets leftovers become lunch, makes dinner easier, or makes a quiet Wednesday feel like somebody still cared enough to make something good.

    And sometimes that is enough.

    Sometimes that is the whole point.

    BBQ Chicken Focaccia Sandwich

    Ingredients

    For the sandwich

    • 1 piece of focaccia bread, sliced in half horizontally
    • 1 to 1 ½ cups cooked chicken, pulled or chopped
    • ⅓ to ½ cup smoky barbecue sauce, plus more if needed
    • 3 to 4 slices of smoked Gouda cheese
    • Thinly sliced red onion
    • Pickle slices
    • 1 tablespoon butter or olive oil, optional, for pressing or toasting

    For the BBQ mayo

    • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise
    • 1 tablespoon smoky barbecue sauce
    • Optional: a small splash of pickle juice or a pinch of black pepper

    Method

    1. Warm the chicken

    Place the cooked chicken in a small skillet over medium-low heat. Add the barbecue sauce and stir until the chicken is coated and warmed through.

    You do not want the chicken drowning. You want it dressed. There is a difference.

    Add more sauce only if the chicken looks dry.

    2. Make the BBQ mayo

    In a small bowl, stir together the mayonnaise and barbecue sauce.

    If you want a little more sharpness, add a small splash of pickle juice. If you want it deeper, add black pepper.

    This sauce is not trying to steal the show. It is there to bring the bread and filling together.

    3. Build the sandwich

    Spread the BBQ mayo on the cut sides of the focaccia.

    Layer the bottom half with smoked Gouda, warm BBQ chicken, thin red onion, and pickle slices.

    Add the top half of the focaccia.

    Press gently with your hands so the sandwich knows what it is becoming.

    4. Toast or press

    Warm a skillet over medium heat. Add a little butter or olive oil if using.

    Place the sandwich in the skillet and press it down gently with a spatula, another pan, or a sandwich press. Cook until the bread is golden and the cheese begins to melt, about 3 to 4 minutes per side.

    Lower the heat if the bread browns too fast. You are not trying to burn your way into flavor. You are trying to give everything time to settle.

    5. Slice and serve

    Let the sandwich rest for a minute before cutting.

    Slice in half and serve warm, preferably with something cool and crisp on the side.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    Pulled chicken works beautifully here, but chopped chicken is just fine. Use what you have. This sandwich does not require perfection. It rewards usefulness.

    Smoked Gouda brings depth, but sharp cheddar, provolone, or mozzarella can work if that is what is in the refrigerator.

    The pickles are not optional in spirit. You can leave them off if you must, but the sandwich needs something sharp to cut through the sweetness and smoke. Pickles do that work honestly.

    Red onion should be sliced thin. Too thick, and it starts acting like it owns the place.

    For the barbecue sauce, use something smoky rather than overly sweet. The sandwich already has richness. It needs balance.

    What to Serve With It

    This sandwich would go well with a cool slaw, a simple green salad, kettle chips, roasted potatoes, or even a small bowl of pickles on the side.

    For this week’s Salt, Ink & Soul rhythm, I would pair it with a creamy apple slaw on Friday — something crisp, cool, and bright enough to stand beside the smoke.

    Closing Reflection

    There is something deeply human about taking what is already there and making it feel intentional.

    Leftover chicken. A good piece of bread. Sauce from a bottle. Cheese from the drawer. Pickles from the jar.

    Nothing grand.

    Nothing precious.

    Just a few small ingredients to become a meal.

    That is the quiet dignity of cooking at home. It does not always have to announce itself. It does not have to impress anybody. Sometimes it only has to feed you well enough to remind you that the day is still worth tending to.

    This sandwich does that.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

  • The Sandwich Press Deserved Better

    The Sandwich Press Deserved Better

    Sometimes you just want a good sandwich.

    Not the sad one built over the sink with the refrigerator door hanging open. Not the emergency sandwich. Not the one made because hunger showed up, and standards quietly left the room.

    That sandwich has its place.

    It has saved many of us.

    But this was not that.

    I wanted bread. Warmth. A little crunch. Something that felt like lunch had bothered to put on a clean shirt.

    I had been thinking about a Caprese salad. Tomato. Mozzarella. Basil. Olive oil. Balsamic glaze. Simple ingredients. Dangerous in the wrong hands because there is nowhere to hide.

    But I did not want a salad.

    I wanted focaccia.

    I wanted the sandwich press, that forgotten little appliance sitting there like an unemployed line cook, to do something useful.

    So I made a Caprese Focaccia Press.

    Focaccia already knows what it is. Oil in the crumb. Salt on the skin. Soft, sturdy, ready for trouble. Press it, and it becomes better. Crisp outside. Warm inside. Mozzarella softening into the tomato. Basil is waking up. Pesto is getting loud in the best way. A small thread of balsamic pulls the whole thing together.

    That is the thing about a good sandwich.

    It is not just filling between bread.

    It is architecture.

    Pressure and tenderness.

    Restraint and appetite.

    This is not fancy food.

    It is not chef food.

    It is home food with better posture.

    Caprese Focaccia Press

    Ingredients

    Makes 1 large sandwich or 2 smaller servings

    • 1 piece of focaccia bread, about 15 x 20 cm, sliced in half horizontally
    • 100–125 g fresh mozzarella, sliced
    • 1 medium tomato, about 120–150 g, thinly sliced
    • 6–8 fresh basil leaves
    • 1–2 tablespoons pesto or 1 tablespoon olive oil
    • 1–2 teaspoons balsamic glaze
    • Pinch of salt
    • Pinch of black pepper
    • 1 teaspoon olive oil, optional, for brushing the outside of the bread

    Optional Additions

    • 15–20 g arugula
    • 2–3 slices prosciutto
    • 30–40 g roasted red peppers, drained and patted dry

    Method

    1. Prepare the tomato

    Slice the tomato thinly.

    Place the slices on a paper towel and gently pat them dry.

    This small step matters. It keeps the sandwich from becoming soggy.

    2. Prepare the focaccia

    Slice the focaccia horizontally in half to create a top and bottom piece.

    Spread 1–2 tablespoons of pesto on the inside of the bread.

    If using olive oil instead of pesto, drizzle about 1 tablespoon over the inside of the focaccia.

    3. Build the sandwich

    Layer the sliced mozzarella over the bottom half of the focaccia.

    Add the tomato slices.

    Season the tomato lightly with salt and black pepper.

    Add the fresh basil leaves.

    Drizzle 1–2 teaspoons of balsamic glaze over the filling.

    Use a light hand here.

    The goal is flavor, not a wet sandwich.

    Add any optional ingredients, if using.

    Close the sandwich with the top half of the focaccia.

    4. Brush the outside

    If the focaccia feels dry, lightly brush the outside with 1 teaspoon olive oil.

    You do not need much.

    Focaccia already carries oil in its bones.

    5. Press the sandwich

    Heat a sandwich press or panini press.

    Place the sandwich inside and press for 4–6 minutes, or until the outside is golden and crisp and the mozzarella has softened.

    If using a skillet, place the sandwich in the pan over medium heat. Press it down gently with another pan or a heavy spatula. Cook for 3–4 minutes per side, until crisp and warmed through.

    6. Rest and serve

    Let the sandwich rest for 1–2 minutes before cutting.

    This helps the cheese settle and keeps the filling from sliding out.

    Cut in half and serve warm.

    Notes From My Kitchen

    Pat the tomato dry.

    Do not overdo the balsamic glaze.

    Let the sandwich rest before cutting.

    Those are small things, but small things often decide whether a meal feels cared for.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times