recipes.

Monday, March 3, 2014

homemade pita bread.




Let's preface this post with the statement that homemade pita bread is awesome.  Really awesome.  

Not only is it awesome but it's absurdly fun to make.  The breads puff up in the oven, inflating like little bread balloons which makes the whole thing feel as if you're making magic.  (And even if yours don't puff up completely they are still utterly awesome as flatbreads so don't fret!)  

I love serving them with hummus (duh) but they also make for an excellent vessel when it comes to eating turkey sandwiches with avocado.  Or they are divine when stuffed with egg salad or chicken salad or chickpea salad! So many possibilities.  

To note!  If you are new to bread baking, well this is the recipe for you.  No excessive kneading, no special equipment, no unique ingredients.  Just the simplest of pantry ingredients and a bowl are the only things required.  Yay! 

Homemade Pita Bread
Recipe via the NYTimes 

Yields 8 six-inch diameter breads

2 teaspoons active dry yeast
½ teaspoon sugar
35 grams whole-wheat flour (1/4 cup), preferably freshly milled
310 grams unbleached all-purposed flour (2 ½ cups)
1 teaspoon kosher salt
2 tablespoons olive oil

Make sponge: Put 1 cup lukewarm water in a large mixing bowl. Add yeast and sugar. Stir to dissolve. Add the whole-wheat flour and 1/4 cup all-purpose flour and whisk together. Put bowl in a warm (not hot) place, uncovered, until mixture is frothy and bubbling, about 15 minutes.

Add salt, olive oil and nearly all remaining all-purpose flour (reserve 1/2 cup). With a wooden spoon or a pair of chopsticks, stir until mixture forms a shaggy mass. Dust with a little reserved flour, then knead in bowl for 1 minute, incorporating any stray bits of dry dough.

Turn dough onto work surface. Knead lightly for 2 minutes, until smooth. Cover and let rest 10 minutes, then knead again for 2 minutes. Try not to add too much reserved flour; the dough should be soft and a bit moist. (At this point, dough may refrigerated in a large zippered plastic bag for several hours or overnight. Bring dough back to room temperature, knead into a ball and proceed with recipe.)

Clean the mixing bowl and put dough back in it. Cover bowl tightly with plastic wrap, then cover with a towel. Put bowl in a warm (not hot) place. Leave until dough has doubled in size, about 1 hour.

Heat oven to 475 degrees. On bottom shelf of oven, place a heavy-duty baking sheet, large cast-iron pan or ceramic baking tile. Punch down dough and divide into 8 pieces of equal size. Form each piece into a little ball. Place dough balls on work surface, cover with a damp towel and leave for 10 minutes.

Remove 1 ball (keeping others covered) and press into a flat disk with rolling pin. Roll to a 6-inch circle, then to an 8-inch diameter, about 1/8 inch thick, dusting with flour if necessary. (The dough will shrink a bit while baking.)

Carefully lift the dough circle and place quickly on hot baking sheet. After 2 minutes the dough should be nicely puffed. Turn over with tongs or spatula and bake 1 minute more. The pita should be pale, with only a few brown speckles. Transfer warm pita to a napkin-lined basket and cover so bread stays soft. Repeat with the rest of the dough balls.

Note: Some measurements for dry ingredients are given by weight for greater accuracy. The equivalent measurements by volume are approximate.

1 comment:

  1. I love pitta bread but I've never thought of making them myself! Yours look beautiful:)

    ReplyDelete