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Pide - Stuffed Turkish Bread

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Pide - Stuffed Turkish Bread Empty Pide - Stuffed Turkish Bread

Post  Admin Sat Jan 19, 2013 11:41 am

Pide - stuffed turkish bread
 

Heres another way to use up left over dough from Lahmacun - or vice versa -

There are some suggested traditional fillings below but my favourite is cooked spinach with a raw egg on top before going into the oven..... We used to buy these from Yasser Halim in Green Lanes when we lived in London....Very rarely managed to get them home unless we bought extras though ...we would have eaten one each before we got back to the carpark !!!


Below we suggest some traditional Turkish toppings, but as with Italian pizzas, once you have the base, you can of course add what you like. Feel free to create your own complex combination of flavours to startle your senses!

Ingredients: (makes approx four Pide bases)

2 teaspoons dried yeast
1 teaspoon sugar
150 ml water or milk
300 grams flour (approx)
1 teaspoon salt
2.5 tablespoons olive oil


Preparation:


First off, warm the water or milk. It must not be warmer than body temperature, otherwise the yeast dies. Just as you would with a bath, use a (clean) elbow to check the temperature if in doubt! Mix in the yeast and sugar. Sift the flour into a large bowl, add the salt, then stir in the yeasty liquid, and add the olive oil.
Mix together until all the ingredients are well blended, then knead the dough for about 2 minutes (the more you knead, the more flexible the dough becomes). Put the dough back in the bowl and dust some flour lightly over the top. Then put a plastic bag over and around the bowl and leave it in a warm place (like an airing cupboard or boiler room) for around 20 minutes. The plastic bags stops the dough from drying out and aids the proving process.
Whilst the dough is proving, you can get started with your topping.

Once the dough has raised (it should be about 50 % larger than before), take it out and knead well to get rid of any air bubbles. You may have to add a little flour to stop it from sticking, but do use sparingly so that the dough remains nice and moist.

Cut the dough into four equal chunks and knead each of them well.

Place one of the pieces on a lightly floured surface, and use a rolling pin (substitute a wine bottle - carefully - if you don’t have a rolling pin to hand) to roll it into an elongated oval.

Spread your desired filling on top of the pide, and crimp the edges up 1-2 centimetres, so your pide has a shape rather like a large stuffed aubergine/eggplant, or a flattened boat.

Brush the sides and edges with olive oil, then bake for about 15 minutes at 250 degrees Celsius.


Meaty (kiymali) pides:

We love spicy, meaty pides. Normally they’re very simple, like this beef variation, which is also the basis for the very thin, round variety of pide in Turkey, known as lahmacun.

250 grams beef mince
1 peeled and diced tomato
1 onion, finely diced
3 tablespoons chopped parsley
1 pepper (you could use a sweet one, or if you like it fiery, use a chilli pepper as well)
Mix all the ingredients together in a large bowl, spread on top of your pide.
Bake in the oven.


Lamb Pide

If you fancy trying something more exotic and unusual:

1 tbls olive oil
2 medium onions diced
125 grams minced lamb
125 grams finely diced lamb
150 ml red wine
2 small garlic cloves
2 tblsp cumin
2 tblsp paprika

Warm a saucepan and fry the onions until they are transparent. Add the mince and diced lamb and fry until all the meat is gently browned. Add the wine and enough water to cover the meat. Let the mixture cook for a good hour or more. Then add the garlic, cumin and paprika, and let the mixture cook for another 15 minutes or so. If any liquid remains, decant it off. Your topping is ready! Simply apply and bake in the oven.


Sujuk (Spicy salami) Pide

25 slices sujuk (or spicy salami sausage)
80 grams grated mozzarella cheese
1 tomato, peeled, sliced
1 long green pepper sliced and de-seeded
Apart from the pepper, mix the ingredients together and spread on top of your pide. Then add the slices of green pepper for a decorative and tasty finish. Bake in the oven.


Cheesy (peynirli) Pide

2 tablespoons oilve oil
1 onion, chopped
1 can chopped tomatoes
1 clove garlic (crushed)
100 grams feta cheese (crumbled)
100 grams mozzarella cheese
Black olives

Fry onions in olive oil until transparent, add garlic and fry for a little longer. Add the tomatoes, and let the mixture cook until most of the juice has evaporated. Spread the sauce on the pide.
Throw on some black olives, some feta cheese, and some mozzarella. Add oregano and black pepper. Bake in the oven.


Spinach and Egg Pide


Cook spinach your favourite way and squeeze out any excess liquid.
Crack a raw egg on top of the spinach before putting it into the oven...
The egg yolk should still be soft when the Pide is cooked - unless you like your eggs hard in which case leave it a little longer but dont burn the bread Very Happy
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