Surprisingly easy homemade pita. (Oh, and tasty too!)
Recipe: (copied from About.com) with my notes
Ingredients:
- 1 package yeast, or quick rising yeast
- 1/2 cup warm water
- 3 cups all purpose flour (unenriched flour is pricey, for this time I settled for just unbleached)
- 1 1/4 teaspoon salt (I used coarse sea salt)
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar (raw sugar worked just fine)
- 1 cup lukewarm water
Preparation:
Dissolve yeast in 1/2 cup of warm water. Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Let sit for 10-15 minutes until water is frothy. In the meantime, combine flour and salt in large bowl. Make a small depression in the middle of flour and pour yeast water in depression. Slowly add 1 cup of lukewarm water, and stir with a wooden spoon or rubber spatula until elastic. Place dough on floured surface and knead for 10-15 minutes. When the dough is no longer sticky and is smooth and elastic, it has been successfully kneaded.
Frothy yeast
Coat large bowl with vegetable oil and place dough in bowl. Turn dough upside down so all of the dough is coated. Allow to sit in a warm place for about 3 hours, or until it has doubled in size.
Remove doubled dough, roll out in a rope, pinch off 10-12 small pieces, and roll into balls. Place balls on floured surface. Roll out each ball of dough with a rolling pin into circles. Each should be about 5-6 inches across and 1/4 inch thick. Preheat oven to 500° F and make sure rack is at the very bottom of oven. Preheat a glass baking dish for a few minutes.
Rolled & ready for the oven
Place two circles in the preheated baking dish. Bake each circle for 4 minutes until the bread puffs up. Turn over and bake for 2 minutes. Remove each pita with a spatula from the baking sheet and add additional pitas for baking. Take spatula and gently push down puff. Immediately place in storage bags.
Pita coated in chipotle hummus
Tuna (w/homemade mayo) & lettuce for my bro
The coolest part about making your own pita is the pocket-factor. The high heat & quick cooking causes the water in the dough to turn to steam, which puffs up the middle forming the pocket. When you see it happen though, it pretty much seems like magic. That's really the beauty of moving to unprocessed, homemade foods: it's about rediscovering the wonder of food. There is so much more to food than eating it. (Although, I'm inordinately fond of that part too!)
Great photos! These look delish. Remind me not to read your blog before lunch.
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