Farinata is a crispy thin bread of chickpea four and water, cooked in an oiled skillet at high temperature. It's gluten-free, so it's not like most breads, but it's too crispy to be called a pancake. It has a natural sweetness, but I still classify it as a savory dish. In Liguria and along the northern Tuscan coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea as far as Pisa it's a street food, but we're not so familiar for it to have "bred contempt", so with good technique and quality ingredients it can go nicely with any assortment of aperitivi.
By all accounts that I have seen, the best farinata has a thin crispy crust with a soft custardy center, the whole thing perfumed with fresh rosemary and black pepper.
The key thing to know about farinata is that the chickpea flour-water mixture must rest for about 5 hours before you bake it. There's no rising, it just takes that long for the chickpea flour to get fully hydrated and stay tender and digestible.
Here's how to do it: