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Prep Time: 120 Minutes Cook Time: 4 Minutes |
Ready In: 124 Minutes Servings: 12 |
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This is the real Greek pita. I found this on a Greek web site. I think it was Susie's Place. This can be used for souvlaki and gyros sndwiches. If you bake this longer, you have pita pockets. The time to make includes rising. Ingredients:
1 1/2 cups warm water |
1 tablespoon olive oil |
4 cups flour |
1 tablespoon sugar |
2 teaspoons salt |
1 1/4 teaspoons yeast |
Directions:
1. Combine the yeast and sugar in a small bowl. 2. Add 1/2 cup of the warm water and let it stand for 10 minutes to proof and ferment. 3. Dissolve the salt in the remaining warm water. 4. Put the flour in a large mixing bowl, making a well in the middle and put the dissolved yeast and salt water into it. 5. With your hands, blend it into a dough. You may need a bit more or less water depending on your flour. 6. Knead the dough in the bowl with your fists for 10-15 minutes or until smooth. 7. Pour the oil over the dough and knead it again until the oil is absorbed. 8. Cover the dough in the bowl with a towel and set in a draft free area to rise to double it's bulk (1-2 hours), then punch it down and knead it again for a few minutes. 9. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 10. Cut pieces of dough, egg-size or larger, depending on the size of the pita desired. 11. Shape them into balls with your hands and roll them out over a lightly floured board or pastry cloth to 1/4 thickness. 12. Set 2 or 3 pitas on a lightly oiled cookie sheet and bake them on the lower rack 2-3 minutes each side. 13. Bake longer for pita pockets. 14. Susie's note: Pitas should be white and soft. Wrap the baked pitas in a clean towel until they are cool, then store them in plastic bags to prevent them from drying out. When you are ready to use them, heat a bit of oil in a skillet and fry them a minute or so on each side, or until golden brown. Use them immediately, because they get hard when they dry out. |
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