Look at what summer's handing us right now. Tomatoes coming in. Peppers, herbs, onions, whatever's crowding your counter or your garden. This week we turn all of it into bread. This Saturday's bake is Summer Garden Focaccia, and it might be the most fun we've had in the pan all year. You're going to decorate this one like a garden. Flowers built from peppers and onion. Stems from chives and asparagus. Tomatoes and olives for color. A wildflower meadow, a summer sunset, your kid's name across the top, whatever you dream up. No two loaves in this kitchen will look alike, and that's the whole point. We're running it two ways, so there's a lane for everybody: Yeasted, beginner-friendly. One bowl, no mixer, no starter. Mix Friday night, rest cold overnight, decorate and bake Saturday. If you're newer to bread, this is your week. pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/summer-garden-focaccia Sourdough, intermediate. For the starter crowd who wants the tang and the big, wild bubbles. Build your levain Friday, cold ferment overnight, bake Saturday. Sandy, Colleen, this one's calling your name. pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/sourdough-summer-garden-focaccia Both recipes have all four decorating tutorials built in, so you've got real guidance, not just "arrange some veggies." And they link to each other in the Pantry, so pick your lane or peek at both. Here's the rhythm: Friday, get your dough going (sourdough folks, feed that starter first). Saturday morning, decorate and bake together. Doors open 8:00 AM ET Saturday and we bake all day. There's one trick that decides whether your garden comes out beautiful or burnt, and I'll walk you through it all week leading up to Saturday. Stay close. So tell me: yeasted or sourdough, and what's in your garden or fridge right now that's going on top? Drop it below. Let's start planning our gardens.