———————-FABULOUS FOOD FOR FRIENDS———————-
1 1/2 tb Yeast 1 c Water
1/2 ts Salt 1 c Apple juice
5 c Flour, whole wheat Cornmeal
6 ts Whole-wheat gluten; opt
Bring all ingredients to room temperature and pour into bakery, in
order. Set “baking control” at 10 o’clock. Select “white bread” and
push Start.
In saucepan, combine water and apple juice and heat just until warm
(about 115 deg). Put warm liquid in large mixing bowl, sprinkle yeast
over liquid and allow to dissolve. Add 2 cups flour and the 6
eeaspoons whole-wheat gluten flour, if desired; beat at medium speed
of electric mixer for 3 minutes. Cover and let rise in warm place
until doubled in size, about 20 min.
Add salt, beat in as much flour as can be beaten vigorously by hand
for 6 minutes. Mix as much remaining flour as can be handled when
mixing by hand and enough so that dough can be removed from bowl onto
floured surface. Cover with a towel and let rest for 10 min.
Knead gently and rhythmically for 10-15 minutes. Keeping dough rolled
in a ball. add the remaining flour, a little at a time, kneading
after each addition. Be careful not to add too much flour, or the
bread will be dry. Keep dough slightly sticky to the touch. Cover
with a towel and let rest 10 minutes.
At this point, the dough may be shaped into pita bread. loaves of
bread, pizza dough, buns, etc. to make pitas, cut dough in half with
lightly floured hands, roll each half into rope 2 1/2 inches in
diameter. Cut each roll into pieces and roll with hands into 2 to 3
inch balls, depending on the desired size of pocked bread.
Place each dough ball on flat surface and with a lightly floured
rolling pin, roll out from center until dough forms a circle 1/4 inch
thick. Gently dip bottom of dough in cornmeal and place on back of
cookie sheet. Cover with a towel and let rise at room tempeerature
for 15 minutes.
The best way to bake pitas is on flat quarry tiles, which can be
purchased at any rock and stone outlet. A cast ironskillet turned
upside down also works well, but limits you to making one pita at a
time. A thrid option, less satisfactory than the others but still
workable, is a cookie sheet turned upside down.
Place one of the three items mentioned above in the oven and preheat
to 500 degrees. Remove top oven rack for convenience in removing
pitas later.
Gently but quickly slip a raised pita onto a spatula and place it on
the hot tile, skillet or cookie sheet. Once it touches the hot
surface, you cannot move it, so aim carefull. Repeat with as many
pitas as your baking method will accomodate. Close oven and bake for
3-4 minutes or until lightly browned. If your baking the pitas on a
cookie sheet you may see very few or perhaps no bubbles appear – do
not overcook just because bubbles are small and not uniform. If
you’re using tiles or a cast iron skillet, you will be able to watch
pockets form immediately.
Remove pitas carefully from oven with spatula and place on cooling
rack. Cut each pita in half while still warm. If difficult to cut.
Place pita in a damp towel for 5 minutes, and then it will cut nicely.
In hot & humid weather, use 1/8 c less water.
Tested in DAK R2D2. Sylvia’s comments:
To store: Place in plastic bags, 3 or 4 to a bag, while still
slightly warm to keep soft. May be frozen.
Yields
25 servings