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  • Pita Bread

    I recall seeing a post about pita bread with a link to a video demonstration quite some time ago, but can no longer find it.

    Can anyone comment on making Pita bread? I have Lebanese friends that I'd love to impress.
    Mike - Saginaw, MI

    Picasa Web Album
    My oven build thread

  • #2
    Re: Pita Bread

    Hi Mike,

    I've had good success making pita's in the WFO.

    I've read specific pita recipes, but will use any left over pizza dough, or any bread dough - a hotish oven (600+?) and keep a close eye on the cooking.

    JED

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    • #3
      Re: Pita Bread

      Do you roll them thin, or just make flat pizza rounds (without toppings). Do they puff up and make a pocket using the pizza dough?
      Mike - Saginaw, MI

      Picasa Web Album
      My oven build thread

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      • #4
        Re: Pita Bread

        Are these the links Mike?
        http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f41/...tube-3840.html
        YouTube - Pita Bread Baking in Wood-Fired Oven

        Rod
        I would have a shot at the answer, if I had the appropriate question.

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        • #5
          Re: Pita Bread

          Originally posted by mfiore View Post
          Do you roll them thin, or just make flat pizza rounds (without toppings).
          Either one works. Pita bread is fantastically easy to make in a WFO and it almost invariably blows people away. The real thing tastes nothing like the dense, crappy stuff you get in a plastic bag.

          Do they puff up and make a pocket using the pizza dough?
          Yes. As long as your dough is adequately hydrated, your oven hot enough (as previously noted, 600-700 degrees is not too hot) and you roll or pat the rounds out to about 1/8" thickness, they will puff up like balloons within a minute or two, three minutes absolute maximum. The trick is to get them out after they have ballooned and 'set up' but before the top or bottom starts to char and they get too crisp.

          Have a breadbasket with a clean, dry towel ready for unloading the pita bread. The towel will help redistribute the moisture and keep the bread soft longer than if you just left it open to the air. Try to ensure that your guests can eat the pita bread almost immediately after it comes out of the oven (certainly not more than a few minutes).

          There was an Afghan place in northern Virginia that my coworkers and I used to like for lunch; the guy built a tandoor in his strip-mall space and would slap the rounds in, by hand, then walk over to the stews, dumplings, pilafs, etc. and ladle out your selections. Then he'd put the plate down, reach in, and grab the now-finished pitas, and then he'd ring you up at the counter. Great place.

          While I don't know if anything I bake will ever approach that level of mastery, it's equally unlikely that anything you or your guests have ever had from a store will come close to freshly baked pitas from your oven.

          Do a test run before your guests arrive to get the timing right. Use enough extra flour to ensure that the rounds won't stick to your peel. After you have the timing wired, everything else is trivially easy, and tastes great. You will be astonished at how fast the pitas disappear.
          Last edited by ttriche; 12-06-2009, 03:53 PM.

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          • #6
            Re: Pita Bread

            I found that I got better results with a rolling pin. The hand stretched ones don't reliably blow up for me, but if they are rolled out I get baloons every time. It's into the really hot oven until they just baloon, flip them over for 10 or 20 seconds, and out. Don't try to brown them: they should be soft and tender. You have to brush really well because pitas seem to pick up more floor crud than pizzas.

            I use a 50-50 whole wheat/AP dough. 250 grams of flour (1 yeast 5 salt 155 water) yields four turning peel sized pitas. As ttriche says, they make a real show.
            My geodesic oven project: part 1, part 2

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            • #7
              Re: Pita Bread

              dmun,

              Am I looking at your formula correctly? This looks like about 124% hydration.
              Mike - Saginaw, MI

              Picasa Web Album
              My oven build thread

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              • #8
                Re: Pita Bread

                Thanks, Mike, that's the amount of water for 500. I edited it.
                My geodesic oven project: part 1, part 2

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                • #9
                  Re: Pita Bread

                  That's what I had assumed.

                  I gave this a try tonight with dmun's formula with 50/50 AP flour, whole weat. I didn't plan ahead and do an overnight cold retard in the fridge like I often do with pizza. Just mixed up the dough, a few hour rise, shaped into 165 gram balls, rest about an hour. Then rolled (yep, I brought our a rolling pin!) quite thin. They dough rolled very easily, but sprung back to a smaller (subsequently thicker) shape when I transferred to the peel.

                  It still turned out fabulous. I slid them in a very hot oven (about 900 F). They ballooned up perfectly with a little char. As soon as they were ballooned, I flipped them, let them sit another 10 secs, then pulled them out. The entire process was less than one minute. As others have mentioned, the visual effects are a real crowd pleaser. The taste was better than any I've had before. I can see myself making these VERY often.

                  Mike - Saginaw, MI

                  Picasa Web Album
                  My oven build thread

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                  • #10
                    Hii Mike, You can try out this recipe.

                    Ingredients


                    • 1 tablespoon instant dry yeast or active dry yeast
                    • 2 1/2 cups warm water
                    • 1/4 teaspoon sugar
                    • 6 cups all-purpose flour
                    • 1 1/2 teaspoon salt
                    • 3 tablespoons olive oil

                    Steps for Preparation:-

                    1. Mix the yeast, water, sugar, and 3 cups to make a sponge. Let it rest for 10 minutes. Add salt and 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in this.

                    2. Add the remaining 3 cups of flour a little at a time until the dough forms a good ball. Knead it on a medium speed for 5 minutes until it looks smooth, shiny and elastic.

                    3. Use the rest 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a large bowl. Roll the dough in the oil, put it in the bowl, cover with a towel and let rise for 2 hours.

                    4. Preheat an oven to 500 degrees with a baking stone.

                    5. Divide the dough into 12 pieces. Roll into 8-inch rounds. Let the rounds rise for 20 min. Just before cooking, roll each piece out into an 8-inch circle.

                    6. Cook in batches 2 at a time on the baking stone. They should puff up and brown in 3-5 minutes.

                    7. Remove from the oven and wrap them in a clean dish towel and put them in a plastic bag to keep them soft and pliable.

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