It’s been a long time since I made bread and I the other day I got that itch! This time I decided to whip up a batch of my (not) Sun Dried Tomato Sauce and mix it with the fresh dough bits to create an ultra flavorful Tomato Herb Pull Apart Bread. This bread would be a treat when served with any dinner, but I also think it makes a nice appetizer. Serve it with a little marinara for dipping and dig in!
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Cheese it Up!
I did use a little Parmesan to make the bread more savory, but you can get even cheesier and add some shredded mozzarella to transform it into a pizza-like pull apart bread! Just toss in a cup or so of shredded mozzarella when you’re mixing the sauce and dough together, so the mozzarella shreds get in the nooks and crannies as the bread rises and bakes.
Semi-homemade Tomato Herb Pul Apart Bread Shortcut
Not into making bread from scratch? You can still make this recipe! Simply buy a ball of pre-made pizza dough or a loaf of frozen bread dough, let it thaw, cut it into small pieces, and proceed from there. That’s the way we used to do it when I was growing up, but I felt like doing it from scratch today!
Tomato Herb Pull Apart Bread
Ingredients
(NOT) SUN DRIED TOMATO SAUCE
- 1/4 cup olive oil ($0.42)
- 1 clove garlic, minced ($0.08)
- 1/2 tsp dried oregano ($0.05)
- 1/2 tsp dried basil ($0.05)
- 1/4 tsp dried thyme ($0.03)
- 1/4 tsp dried rosemary ($0.03)
- Pinch red pepper flakes ( $0.02)
- 10-15 cranks of a pepper mill ($0.05)
- 1/2 tsp salt ($0.03)
- 3 oz. (5 Tbsp) tomato paste ($0.33)
- 1/2 tsp honey ($0.02)
BREAD
- 1 cup warm water ($0.00)
- 2 tsp active dry yeast ($0.19)
- 1/2 tsp sugar ($0.01)
- 1 Tbsp olive oil ($0.11)
- 1 tsp salt ($0.05)
- 3 cups (approx.) all-purpose flour ($0.29)
- 1/4 cup grated Parmesan ($0.24)
Instructions
- Prepare the tomato sauce first, so that it has time to cool. In a small skillet combine the olive oil, garlic, oregano, basil, thyme, rosemary, red pepper, cracked pepper, and salt. Heat the oil and herbs over medium-low for 2-3 minutes to gently infuse the oil with flavor. It’s okay for the herbs to sizzle, but do not let them burn.
- Add the tomato paste and honey to the skillet. Stir and cook for 3-5 minutes more, or until the tomato paste becomes a deep red color. The tomato paste and oil will not create a smooth sauce, but will stay fairly separated. Let the sauce cool.
- While the sauce is cooling, stir the yeast and sugar into one cup of warm water. Let the mixture sit for about 5 minutes, or until it develops a thick layer of foam on top.
- In a large bowl, stir together one cup of the flour with the salt. Add the olive oil to the yeast mixture, then pour it into the bowl with the flour and stir until it forms a smooth paste. Continue to add flour, 1/2 cup at a time, to the bowl until it forms a sticky ball of dough that you can no longer stir with a spoon.
- Liberally dust a clean work surface with flour and transfer the sticky dough from the bowl to the work surface. Knead the dough for about 5 minutes, slowly adding more flour as you go, until a smooth ball of dough has formed and you’ve used about 3 cups of flour total (from beginning to end). Let the dough rest for 5 minutes.
- Use a bench scraper or sharp knife to cut the dough into 1-inch chunks. Place the cut dough into a clean bowl, add the cooled tomato sauce, and grated Parmesan. Toss the dough pieces in the sauce and cheese until everything is evenly coated. If the dough pieces stick together before they get coated in the sauce, simply pull them apart.
- Coat a 9-inch pie plate or bread loaf pan with non-stick spray. Place the sauce coated bread pieces in the prepared dish. Cover loosely with plastic and let the bread rise for one hour, or until double in size.
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Bake the bread for 23-25 minutes, or until the top has darkened slightly and the bread sounds hollow when tapped with your finger. Let the bread cool slightly, then serve.
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Nutrition
Scroll down for the step by step photos!
How to Make Tomato Herb Pull Apart Bread – Step by Step Photos
Start by making the (not) Sun Dried Tomato Sauce so that it has time to cool. I used slightly less olive oil for the sauce this time because I didn’t feel like it needed as much for this application. Begin with 1/4 cup olive oil, 1 clove of minced garlic, 1/2 tsp dried oregano, 1/2 tsp dried basil, 1/4 tsp dried thyme, 1/4 tsp dried rosemary, a pinch of red pepper flakes, some freshly cracked pepper, and 1/2 tsp of salt in a skillet. Heat over medium-low flame for about 3 minutes to infuse the oil. It’s okay for the spices to sizzle a bit, but don’t let them burn.
Add 3 oz. tomato paste (that’s just half of a 6oz. can, or about 5 Tbsp), and 1/2 tsp honey. Continue to stir and cook for about 5 minutes.
The oil and tomato paste will not form a smooth sauce. Watch for the tomato paste to take on a deep, dark red color. Let the sauce cool as you prepare the dough.
Combine 1 cup warm water with 2 tsp active dry yeast (or one of those 1/4oz. yeast packets) and 1/2 tsp sugar. Stir to dissolve, then let it sit for about 5 minutes, or until it develops a thick layer of foam on top.
In a large bowl, stir together 1 cup of all-purpose flour and 1 tsp salt. Add 1 Tbsp olive oil to the yeast mixture, then pour it into the bowl with the flour and stir until a smooth paste forms.
Continue to add flour, 1/2 cup at a time, until it forms a sticky ball of dough that you can no longer stir with a spoon (I think it was about 2 cups total before I could no longer stir).
Liberally dust a clean work surface with flour, then transfer the sticky dough from the bowl to the work surface. Knead the dough for 5 minutes, adding small amounts of flour as you go. After five minutes, you should have a smooth and elastic ball of dough and used about 3 cups of flour (3 cups total from start to finish). Let the dough rest for about 5 minutes.
Cut the dough into one-inch pieces.
Add the dough pieces, cooled tomato sauce (with all the oil), and 1/4 cup grated Parmesan to a clean bowl. Toss the dough pieces in the sauce and oil until they’re coated. The dough pieces may stick to each other before they’re fully coated, but you can just pull them apart. Don’t be afraid to pull and stretch the dough. It can handle it.
Coat a 9-inch pie plate or a bread pan with non-stick spray. Transfer the dough pieces to the prepared dish, cover loosely with plastic, and let rise for one hour, or until doubled in size.
This is the bread after it has risen for one hour (it’s pretty warm here, so bread rises quickly). Preheat the oven to 350ºF.
Once the oven has preheated, bake the bread for 23-25 minutes, or until it has darkened on top and it sounds hollow when you tap on the top. Let it cool just a few minutes, then serve the Tomato Herb Pull Apart Bread warm. YUM!
Would this work with feta mixed into the dough instead of parm?
We’ve only tried with parmesan and mozzarella, but feta might work, too! If you try it out, let us know how it goes! ~ Marion :)
Did anybody try this recipe with almond flour instead? Any suggestions? Thank you
This type of bread recipe will not work with almond flour, unfortunately.
These pull apart rolls are ridiculously good!
Sometimes I mix it up by making a roasted garlic butter instead of the pizza flavors.
I’ve made this twice and it’s delicious (kid #1 requested it for Christmas Eve festivities), BUT I’ve found that stirring the sauce into the dough is an epic mess and I wind up dividing the dough twice. Next time I’ll handle this like a traditional monkey bread: make the dough balls, swish each one through the sauce and cheese individually, and place them in the pan. Thanks for this great recipe!
do you think it would still be good to leave the cheese out? i’m hosting a dinner party with a vegan guest (he eats honey)
I really think this one needs the cheese to balance the tangy tomato sauce. :(
I know this is really old but if someone is scrolling later with a similar question, I used nutritional yeast as an experiment and it worked nicely!
I’ve made this a couple times now, it is so good! I’ve changed a couple very minor things: 2-3 cloves garlic, and no red pepper but I typically add a little onion powder also. This bread is awesome dipped in pesto, especially if it’s homemade!
It was delicious, although my tomato sauce burned at the top.
Hey there! I’m dying to make this, but there’s something I was hoping you could tell me. Do you pour your flour, or do you scoop it? You probably know this, but with scooping, the flour ends up being packed, and a good deal more flour (by weight) ends up in the cup than simply pouring from the bag into the measuring cup. In a recipe that calls for 3 cups, this difference could end up being an entire extra cup of flour. And nobody EVER mentions how they do something as “simple” as measuring flour, so in most baking recipes I’m left just guessing.. which doesn’t always necessarily turn out well.
Thanks in advance!
I scoop and scrape off the top, but I always suggest adding flour until the dough ball gets to be the right consistency, rather than using a strict flour measurement. Humidity can make a big difference in the amount of flour needed as well. :)
Bethhh help, I tried to make this but the dough refused to smooth out, even after 10+ minutes of kneading :( I consider myself at least an intermediate bread maker and I’ve never had this happen before. It’s like the glutens were refusing to develop. I definitely added the ingredients in the proper order in the proper quantities, I double checked. The only thing I can think of is its very humid and not air-conditioned in my new place (I recently moved), maybe that affected it? It’s resting right now, I’m still going to proceed and hope for the best.
Hmmm. I sometimes find that bread dough can look a little rough even after kneading, but once it rests for about five minutes it’s miraculously a lot smoother. Perhaps that’s all it needed. I hope it turned out okay!
probably you won’t see this… but someone else may have the same problem.
I’d bet a dollar that you found the dough worked easier after allowing it to rest a bit. After working with the dough, the gluten strands were very active, they were actually resisting your efforts to manipulate the dough. Covering it and walking away 5 or 10 minutes will allow the gluten to relax. The easiest way to see this happening is when working a pizza dough. You stretch it as much as you can, and it resists and shrinks back up some, leave it alone for 5 and try again and presto!
I just made this totally on a whim to go with dinner– not gonna lie I cheated with pre made pizza dough but OMG! It was AMAZING! Totally addictive. My husband and I had to stop ourselves from eating the whole pan. It’s definitely “company worthy.”
This looks great and id love to make it for a party this weekend. Can it be premade and reheated?
Just made this to go with dinner! Yummm!! Quick note: the recipe ingredients show 1 tbps of olive oil for the bread, but it’s not in the instruction portion (that I can see). I just added it to the water/sugar mixture and the bread turned out great! There’s only two of us, and it’s already almost gone.
Thanks for catching that!! Fixing now.
Hey Beth! I’m currently working on making this, but I’m wondering about the 1 Tablespoon of olive oil listed in the bread ingredients– I don’t see it anywhere in the instructions.
Thanks!
Made this for girls night – everyone loved it. Will definitely be making this again!
This is oozing with savor! I can just imagine my mouth waters by just watching the photos, how much more if I taste it?! I can’t wait to try one on my own.
I love this idea but my husband doesn’t like sun dried tomato. Any suggestions for other sauces to use?
Basil or herb pesto might be another option.
I agree with the pesto suggestion. :)
This looks sooooo good! I’m going to need to come up with a reason to make it sometime soon. Also I just discovered your blog today and I’m hooked.
Monkey bread is always a winner–thanks for setting my imagination on the run again!
Well, I know what I’m making when we have company this weekend! If I were to make this with pre-made pizza dough, would I still need to cover it and let it sit for an hour?
I would, yes. :)
oooo. throw in some slivers of pepperoni and black olives and you’ve got pizza monkey bread….this looks amazing!
I bet this smelled amazing!
What a creative way to use that tomato paste sauce, thanks for sharing!
I’d love to know what sauce pan you are using in the pictures. I have been on the hunt for a budget friendly saucier with good reviews for quite a while and that looks beautiful. Thanks in advance!
That is part of my OXO stainless steel set. It’s a mid-range priced set, but I love them so far. Here is a link to the blog post I wrote when I was trying to decide which cookware set to buy: How to Shop for Cookware.
How would you recommend storing the leftovers of this bread? Thanks!
Let it cool completely to room temperature, then keep it in an air-tight container (like a zip top bag).
I just made some oven-roasted tomato sauce, so I’m thinking I may have to use it for this!
You totally just made my day!