Food recipes
Syrian Pita or Pocket Bread
Syrian Pita or Pocket Bread Ingredients: leavening agents, yeast, baker's, active dry water, bottled, generic honey oil, olive, salad or cooking wheat flours, bread, unenriched salt, table Directions: In a small bowl,...
Syrian Pita or Pocket Bread
Ingredients:
leavening agents, yeast, baker's, active dry
water, bottled, generic
honey
oil, olive, salad or cooking
wheat flours, bread, unenriched
salt, table
Directions:
In a small bowl, combine the yeast, 1/2 cup of the warm water, and the honey.
Let stand until slightly frothy, about 5 minutes.
Add the oil and mix.
In a large bowl, combine the flour and salt.
Make a well in the center of the flour and pour the yeast mixture into it, mixing it into the flour with a wooden spoon.
Add the remaining 2 cups warm water, 1/2 cup at a time.
Shape the dough into a sticky ball and knead on a clean, well-floured work surface until very smooth and elastic, a good 10 minutes (add more flour as needed, a little at a time, if your dough is too sticky to knead).
Place the dough in a greased glass or plastic bowl and cover with a towel.
Let rest in a warm place for 1 1/2 hours to rise and double in size.
Knead the dough on a floured surface for another 10 minutes (again, adding flour as needed) and roll it into a tube about 1 foot long and about 3 1/2 to 4 inches in diameter.
Using a sharp knife, mark 16 equal lines on the roll of dough, then break the dough into 16 pieces of equal size and roll each into a ball.
On the same floured surface, roll out each ball with a rolling pin or tall glass until the dough is 1/4 inch thick and 6 inches in diameter, resembling a small pizza.
Place each rolled-out piece of dough on a floured piece of foil cut to the same size as a baking sheet, 4 to 5 at a time, until all 16 have been made.
Cover the flattened dough pieces with a kitchen towel and let them rise in a warm spot for another 2 hours.
(At this point, preheat the oven to 550F for 2 hours.
It is important to get the oven temperature as high as possible so that each pita bakes quickly and forms a pocket.)
Carefully lift up one sheet of foil with the risen dough pieces and place on a baking sheet.
Bake on the middle rack in the oven for 4 to 5 minutes.
Do not open the oven more than a crack until you see the bread puff up.
Take the sheet out and remove the baked pita breads, placing them in a basket and covering them with a clean cloth to keep warm.
Discard the used foil and transfer another sheet of unbaked pieces to the baking sheet.
Continue to bake in this manner, one sheet at a time, until all the pitas are baked.
Serve immediately alongside any maazeh salad or spread or as a sandwich with ijeh in its pocket.
These really dont stay soft and fresh past a day, but if you have a lot left over, store them in a zipper-lock plastic bag for up to 2 days on the counter or 1 week in the freezer, toasting them in the oven when needed.
Ingredients:
leavening agents, yeast, baker's, active dry
water, bottled, generic
honey
oil, olive, salad or cooking
wheat flours, bread, unenriched
salt, table
Directions:
In a small bowl, combine the yeast, 1/2 cup of the warm water, and the honey.
Let stand until slightly frothy, about 5 minutes.
Add the oil and mix.
In a large bowl, combine the flour and salt.
Make a well in the center of the flour and pour the yeast mixture into it, mixing it into the flour with a wooden spoon.
Add the remaining 2 cups warm water, 1/2 cup at a time.
Shape the dough into a sticky ball and knead on a clean, well-floured work surface until very smooth and elastic, a good 10 minutes (add more flour as needed, a little at a time, if your dough is too sticky to knead).
Place the dough in a greased glass or plastic bowl and cover with a towel.
Let rest in a warm place for 1 1/2 hours to rise and double in size.
Knead the dough on a floured surface for another 10 minutes (again, adding flour as needed) and roll it into a tube about 1 foot long and about 3 1/2 to 4 inches in diameter.
Using a sharp knife, mark 16 equal lines on the roll of dough, then break the dough into 16 pieces of equal size and roll each into a ball.
On the same floured surface, roll out each ball with a rolling pin or tall glass until the dough is 1/4 inch thick and 6 inches in diameter, resembling a small pizza.
Place each rolled-out piece of dough on a floured piece of foil cut to the same size as a baking sheet, 4 to 5 at a time, until all 16 have been made.
Cover the flattened dough pieces with a kitchen towel and let them rise in a warm spot for another 2 hours.
(At this point, preheat the oven to 550F for 2 hours.
It is important to get the oven temperature as high as possible so that each pita bakes quickly and forms a pocket.)
Carefully lift up one sheet of foil with the risen dough pieces and place on a baking sheet.
Bake on the middle rack in the oven for 4 to 5 minutes.
Do not open the oven more than a crack until you see the bread puff up.
Take the sheet out and remove the baked pita breads, placing them in a basket and covering them with a clean cloth to keep warm.
Discard the used foil and transfer another sheet of unbaked pieces to the baking sheet.
Continue to bake in this manner, one sheet at a time, until all the pitas are baked.
Serve immediately alongside any maazeh salad or spread or as a sandwich with ijeh in its pocket.
These really dont stay soft and fresh past a day, but if you have a lot left over, store them in a zipper-lock plastic bag for up to 2 days on the counter or 1 week in the freezer, toasting them in the oven when needed.