Thursday, January 19, 2012

Five-Minute Cheese'n'Olive Flatbread

Pizzas, flatbreads, whathaveyou was the directive from Big Chief Recipeshed, a.k.a. Keith from Chronicles of a Reluctant Housdad. I never met a carbohydrate I didn't like so anything with cheese and dough has got to be a winner. I absolutely adore pizza and we have it (homemade and healthy of course *polishes fingernails on lapel*) just about every week. There are some fabulous pizza recipes on the linky and even a vlog. So with all the pizzas linked up, I obvioulsy had to go the flatbread route.

Sitting round bonfires is a national sport in Israel. We sing, tell jokes, smoke  and eat...lots. We do that whole Beduin role-play thing with black coffee in glasses and we make pita bread. Now the thing about campfire pita is, it's delicious - chewy, smokey, sprinkled with a bit of salt and za'atar (dried hyssop and seseme seeds). And the other thing is that it takes five minutes to make. You mix some flour, water and oil, make a dough, roll it out and fling it onto an upturned dustbin lid on the fire. When it's dry enough to start sliding off it's done.

When I see recipes for pizza dough with yeast that requires proving (or is it proofing?) and relaxing and waiting a few hours between each stage, I think of the campfire pita and want to ask, "why?" Ok, I know why. But I also know why not and here it is...

Friday being shopping day, this is what I found to work with: white cheese (I think it's the same as quark), flour and some olives. Later I added salt, pepper and olive oil.


I put 2 heaped spoons of the cheese in a bowl with about 1 cup of flour, salt, pepper and some olive oil.
Then I formed it into a dough (adding some extra flour to make it malleable) and pressed it out into a round shape about the size of a side plate and 1cm thick.
I sliced the olives and sprinkled them over the top, folded in the edges like making an envelope, and pressed the dough out again (this time with the olives inside - clever eh?) back to the side plate size.

Into a hot oven for about half an hour et voila!

Honest verdict: It is delicious but it's not chewy at all. It's more like a soft cheesey pastry than bread. It would make a great pizza base though.

7 comments:

  1. I was hooked at 'chewy and smoky' but the genius of making an envelope with the olives inside takes it to a different level. That's looks soooo-perb. A hunk of cheese and a little dipping bowl of olive oil would complete the picture. Yum. Yum.

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  2. Thanks Keith, I forgot to mention that it only takes 2 minutes to eat.

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  3. I am posting this comment with Rachel's permission... and next time I see her I will give her some free zaatar.

    I noticed that she mentioned zaatar / hyssop - which is actually either difficult to come across in UK / USA or expensive. As it happens, I have been selling Zaatar for several years now, on Ebay and in my webstore (so much so that some of my friends call me the zaatar queen).

    Coincidentally, I just started stocking a new brand of Zaatar just a couple of days ago (before that I sold it by weight - anywhere from 100g- 1 kg. I have sold the zaatar to people in the weirdest of places - from Japan to Zagreb ... once you have tried it and liked it it is pretty addictive. This new type is probably the best zaatar I have ever tasted ... which is actually what I used to say about the previous type.

    Anyway, this comment is getting too long - so here is where you can find it ...

    http://holyroses.co.uk/p/product/1201189685 shipped all over the world (except Australia - which does not allow this sort of product in via the mail service).

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  4. You have me sold on the non-prooving dough- so simple and so effective and I am sure truly delicious. Again, you have educated me, I had never heard of zaatar, and now I know. Thank you.

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  5. Anton 1a - it's my pleasure, however I fell it only fair to tell yhou that you don't get the same chewiness without the yeast.

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