Sourdough Bin Adventures (Episode 3) : Pitas

Toast

Pita bread is so delicious, I am surprised that I waited this long to attempt making them.

As mentioned in other articles I've posted, I keep sourdough in a bin in the fridge all week long, which I pinch from to make various things like loaves, pizza, tortillas, etc.. Well now I have a new use: PITAS!

(The sourdough I keep in the fridge is made from 100% freshly ground organic whole wheat, sourdough starter, water & salt--80% hydration.)

It was really quite easy to make them.  I just took 150g of sourdough from my bin per pita (I actually weighed them).  I formed them into a ball and let them acclimate for a couple hours.  Started up the oven with 2 pizza stones in it (one above and one below) and preheated both stones to 550F.

I rolled them out to about 1/4" thick or a little less and cooked them one by one one the bottom stone.  They magically poofed up into nice looking pitas!

They look delicious and I can't wait to try one tomorrow for lunch.

How attractive, and easy! they look delicious Loafgeek.

were these from the recipe of peter reinhart's wholegrain breads?

 

I haven't read Peter Reinhart's book yet--I should get it.  I just read about pitas a little bit on the forum here on how to roll them out and bake them--also looked at some youtube videos.  As far as the dough goes, I just used what I had on hand (and use for almost everything else)--i.e. my sourdough bin.

Thanks for the compliment.

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pitas.   They would go very well with some Southwest Hummus.   I sort of got hooked on both while living in Saudi Arabia :-)

Nice baking.

.. only one problem:  they were really thin on the top and thick on the bottom.

I made another batch of six tonight and tried letting them rest 30 minutes after rolling; this didn't work--again they were thin on the top and thick on the bottom.

Then I tried something wtih the last four of the batch.  After putting one in, I flipped it after 30 seconds.  The result was it turned out perfect and more evenly crusty on each side.  I did the same thing with the remaining three, and all had the same results:  same thickness on both sides.  They still puffed up really nice and again the crust was better on the top.

I was also very careful to roll them the same thickness--but later on determined this didn't really matter because I stretched out a few by hand after resting (like I do pizza dough) and they puffed up evenly.

My pitas always come out thicker on one side then the other.  I thought that one side on the stone was the culprit but now you have figured it out.   Will bake them correctly from now on like i do tortillas  30 seconds on one side then flip them.

Your pitas look great and I bet they will taste very good too.  Nice baking.