Quick jam donut focaccia — the sweet breakfast bread that breaks all the rules

Total Time: 1 hr 10 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Fluffy, Golden, and Drizzled with Sweet Glaze — No Frying Required
A golden fluffy jam donut focaccia with bubbling raspberry jam pockets and white glaze drizzled over the top in a black baking pan on a marble surface pinit

I never thought I’d be the person who describes a bread recipe as life-changing, but here we are. This jam donut focaccia came into my kitchen on a slow Sunday morning when I was craving something sweet but had absolutely zero interest in standing over a fryer making actual donuts. And what came out of that oven stopped me completely in my tracks.

It has everything you love about a jam donut — that soft, pillowy dough, pockets of sweet fruity jam, and a glaze that makes you want to skip straight to dessert — but none of the deep frying, none of the mess, and none of the stress. You mix it, you let it rest, you bake it, and you drizzle it. That’s genuinely all there is to it.

The first time I served this at breakfast my family went completely quiet. Not the bad kind of quiet. The kind where everyone is too busy eating to talk. If that’s not a five star review I don’t know what is.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • All the flavor of a jam donut without any frying or complicated technique
  • Soft, pillowy, golden focaccia with jammy fruit pockets in every single bite
  • The sweet glaze drizzled on top takes it completely over the edge
  • Comes together in under an hour with basic pantry and fridge ingredients
  • Works as a breakfast, brunch showstopper, or an indulgent afternoon treat
  • Completely customizable — use any jam flavor you love and it works beautifully

Ingredients and key notes

For the focaccia dough:

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour — spoon and level it, do not pack the cup or your dough will be too stiff
  • 1 teaspoon instant yeast — instant yeast goes straight into the flour with no proofing needed, which is what makes this quick
  • 1 teaspoon sugar — this feeds the yeast and helps the dough rise
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 3/4 cup warm water — it should feel warm on your wrist, not hot; water that is too hot will kill the yeast
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil — plus extra for drizzling on top before baking

For the jam topping:

  • 1/2 cup raspberry jam — or any jam you love; strawberry, cherry, and blueberry all work wonderfully
  • 1 tablespoon sugar — sprinkled on top before baking for a slightly crisp, caramelized surface

For the glaze:

  • 1 cup powdered sugar
  • 2 to 3 tablespoons milk — add it gradually until you reach a drizzleable consistency
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

Key notes:

  • Instant yeast and active dry yeast are not the same thing. Instant yeast goes straight into the dry ingredients. If you only have active dry yeast, dissolve it in the warm water with the sugar first and let it sit for 5 minutes until foamy before proceeding.
  • The dough for focaccia is intentionally wetter and stickier than regular bread dough. Do not add extra flour to compensate — the wet dough is exactly what gives you that light, airy texture.
  • Use a good quality jam with real fruit pieces for the best result. A jam with actual fruit chunks creates those beautiful jammy pockets throughout the bread.
  • Warm water temperature matters more than people think. Aim for around 110 degrees F. If you do not have a thermometer, it should feel comfortably warm on your inner wrist — not cool, not hot.
  • Let the glaze set for at least 5 minutes before slicing. It firms up slightly and makes for a much cleaner cut.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Mix your dough

In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the flour, instant yeast, sugar, and salt. Add the warm water and olive oil and mix with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula until a shaggy, sticky dough forms. Do not worry about how it looks at this stage — sticky is correct.

Step 2: Let the dough rest

Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen towel and let the dough rest at room temperature for 30 minutes. It will puff up and become softer and more airy during this time. This rest is what builds the flavor and texture of the bread.

Step 3: Prepare your pan

While the dough rests, generously grease a 9×13 inch baking pan or a loaf pan with olive oil. Do not be shy with the oil — it coats the bottom of the dough as it bakes and gives you that signature golden, slightly crispy underside that makes focaccia so irresistible.

Step 4: Transfer and spread the dough

Pour the rested dough into your prepared pan. Use your fingertips to gently stretch and press it out toward the edges of the pan. If the dough springs back, let it rest for 2 minutes and try again. It will cooperate eventually.

Step 5: Add the jam

Drop spoonfuls of jam all over the surface of the dough, spacing them fairly evenly. Use your fingertips to gently press each spoonful of jam slightly into the dough — this creates those beautiful pockets of jam that bake right into the bread. Sprinkle the tablespoon of sugar evenly over the top.

Step 6: Drizzle with olive oil

Drizzle a little extra olive oil over the entire surface of the dough. This helps the top turn golden and gives the bread that characteristic focaccia sheen as it bakes.

Step 7: Bake

Place the pan in your preheated 400 degree F oven and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until the focaccia is puffed, deeply golden on top, and pulling away from the edges of the pan. The jam pockets will be bubbling and caramelized and your kitchen will smell absolutely incredible.

Step 8: Make the glaze

While the focaccia bakes, whisk together the powdered sugar, vanilla extract, and milk in a small bowl. Add the milk one tablespoon at a time until you reach a smooth, pourable consistency — thick enough to coat a spoon but thin enough to drizzle easily.

Step 9: Glaze and serve

Let the focaccia cool in the pan for about 5 minutes after it comes out of the oven. Then drizzle the glaze generously and evenly over the top. Let it sit for another 5 minutes so the glaze can set slightly before you slice and serve.

Serving suggestions

This jam donut focaccia is genuinely versatile for something that looks this indulgent. Here are some great ways to serve it:

  • Slice it into squares and serve warm at the breakfast table with hot coffee or tea — it is the kind of thing that makes a regular morning feel like a weekend
  • Cut it into smaller pieces and serve it as part of a brunch spread alongside fruit, yogurt, and eggs
  • Serve it slightly warm with a small scoop of vanilla ice cream for a simple but genuinely impressive dessert
  • Pack individual slices into lunchboxes as a sweet treat — it travels well and holds up at room temperature for hours
  • Serve it on a wooden board at a gathering with extra jam on the side for dipping — people will crowd around it
  • Pair a warm slice with a cup of earl grey tea for an afternoon snack that feels like a proper occasion

Storage tips

Room temperature: Store leftover focaccia in an airtight container or wrapped tightly in plastic wrap at room temperature for up to 2 days. The texture is best on day one but it stays soft and good on day two.

Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. The glaze will absorb into the bread slightly in the fridge which actually makes it taste even more like a donut — so that is not a complaint.

Reheating: Warm individual slices in the microwave for 15 to 20 seconds for that fresh-baked softness. You can also warm the whole pan in a 300 degree F oven for about 8 minutes if you want to reheat a larger portion.

Freezer: This focaccia freezes well. Let it cool completely and slice it first, then freeze individual slices in a single layer on a baking sheet. Once frozen solid, transfer to a freezer bag and store for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature or warm gently in the microwave.

Before you go

There is something genuinely joyful about a recipe that looks impressive, tastes incredible, and asks almost nothing of you in return. This jam donut focaccia is exactly that kind of recipe. One bowl, a little patience while the dough rests, and twenty-five minutes in the oven — and you have something that looks like it came from a bakery.

Make it on a slow weekend morning when you want the kitchen to smell amazing. Make it for brunch when you want people to walk in and immediately ask what you made. Make it on a Tuesday just because you deserve something good and you have jam in the fridge.

However you serve it and whatever jam you use — I think you are going to love this one. Let me know how it turns out and tag me when you make it. I never get tired of seeing your versions of these recipes.

With gratitude, Kip

Quick jam donut focaccia — the sweet breakfast bread that breaks all the rules

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 45 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 1 hr 10 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 8
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

This quick jam donut focaccia delivers everything you crave about a classic jam donut — soft pillowy dough, sweet jammy pockets, and a generous drizzle of glaze — all baked in a single pan without any frying. It comes together in under an hour and hits the table looking like something you spent all morning on. Perfect for weekend breakfast, brunch, or anytime you need something a little special without a lot of effort.

Ingredients

Focaccia dough:

Jam topping:

Glaze:

Instructions

  1. Whisk together flour, instant yeast, sugar, and salt in a large bowl. Add warm water and olive oil and mix until a sticky dough forms.
  2. Cover and let the dough rest for 30 minutes at room temperature.
  3. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Generously grease a 9x13 inch baking pan with olive oil.
  4. Transfer dough to the prepared pan and press it out toward the edges with your fingertips.
  5. Drop spoonfuls of jam over the surface and press gently into the dough. Sprinkle sugar on top. Drizzle with olive oil.
  6. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes until golden and puffed.
  7. Whisk together powdered sugar, vanilla, and milk to make the glaze.
  8. Cool for 5 minutes then drizzle glaze over the top. Rest for another 5 minutes before slicing and serving.
Keywords: jam donut focaccia, sweet focaccia recipe, quick focaccia bread, donut focaccia, breakfast focaccia, easy sweet bread recipe, jam focaccia, glazed focaccia bread
Did you make this recipe?

Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

Pin this recipe to share with your friends and followers.

pinit

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Can I use active dry yeast instead of instant yeast?

Yes you can. The difference is in how you use it. Active dry yeast needs to be dissolved in warm water with the sugar first and left to sit for about 5 minutes until it becomes foamy and active. Once it is proofed and bubbly, add it to your flour mixture and proceed as normal. Instant yeast skips that step entirely which is why this recipe calls for it — it keeps things quick and simple.

What jam works best for this recipe?

Raspberry is my personal favorite because the tartness of the raspberry cuts through the sweetness of the glaze beautifully. But this recipe is genuinely flexible. Strawberry, cherry, blueberry, blackberry, and even apricot all work wonderfully. Use whatever you have in your fridge or whatever your family loves most. The only thing I would avoid is a very watery jam — thicker jams with real fruit pieces hold up better during baking and create those gorgeous jammy pockets.

My dough is really sticky — is that normal?

Yes, completely normal and actually exactly what you want. Focaccia dough is much wetter and stickier than standard bread dough. That high hydration is what gives you the light, airy, open crumb that makes focaccia so good. Resist the urge to add more flour — it will only make the bread dense and tough. Oil your hands lightly if the dough is sticking to you while you press it into the pan.

Can I make this the night before?

Yes, and this is actually a great strategy for a stress-free brunch morning. After mixing the dough, cover the bowl and place it in the refrigerator overnight instead of leaving it at room temperature. The dough will rise slowly in the fridge. The next morning take it out, let it sit at room temperature for 20 minutes, then press it into the pan, add your toppings, and bake as directed. The slow overnight rise actually develops even more flavor.

Can I make this without the glaze?

You can, but I would really encourage you not to. The glaze is what pushes this from a sweet bread into actual donut territory. Without it the focaccia is still delicious but it loses that signature jam donut identity that makes this recipe so fun and memorable. If you want a slightly lighter version, you can reduce the glaze by half and drizzle it more sparingly — that works well too.

Can I double this recipe?

Absolutely. Double all the ingredients and use a larger baking pan or two separate 9x13 inch pans. The baking time stays roughly the same but start checking at the 20 minute mark. This is a great recipe to double when you are feeding a crowd at brunch — it scales up easily and everybody always wants more than one slice.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This error message is only visible to WordPress admins

Error: No feed found.

Please go to the Instagram Feed settings page to create a feed.