So this poor little blog has been a bit abandoned as of late.  Why? Because B-School is crazy.  And by crazy I mean super busy, super fun and  A LOT of work.  I’ve learned so much over the past three months both in the class room and outside of the classroom. I came into business school with the mindset that for the next two years I’d push boundaries both personally and professionally.  We’re talking everything from travels, to activities, to how I socialize to the classes that I take etc.  In the past three months I’ve been to Thailand and Indiana, ziplined, danced many a night away and I know that they are just core courses but I’m taking all sorts of quant courses.  Oh, and it seems that in the spring I’m going to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and Oman.  On top of that recruiting started a mere few weeks after the start of classes.  Recruiting alone is a courseload of work.  Looking at my calendar for next week I pretty much have a dinner even booked with a firm each night (and one night I have two!).  I also find it fascinating to speak to so many people about their unique experiences at these different firms.    Needless to say business school is amazing.

And now back to the regularly scheduled blog post…

Now, you all know I’m pretty crafty but even sometimes I surprise myself.  One of my fave Toronto food blogs (that really doesn’t focus on Toronto) is Le Sauce by Yasmin.  While she’s vegetarian I don’t hold that against her and totally love everything about her blog (and I imagine she’s pretty awesome in person too).  Imagine my surprise when visiting her blog a few weeks ago that I saw a menu for a Lebanese lunch that included homemade pita bread.

Yes, pita bread.

For some reason it had NEVER occurred to me to make pita bread from scratch.  It’s not like the ones I get from the supermarket are that great or anything but I guess I kind of assumed that they required some special equipment or something to make the pocket.  Shockingly, no special equipment is required and they are actually super easy to make.

When I was coming off my juice cleanse this summer I wanted to have a vegetarian feast so I made all sorts of goodness including tabbouleh and hummus and thought that homemade pita was a great accompaniment.  The ingredient list is simple and you likely have everything in your pantry already to make this happen. From a time perspective there isn’t a ton of hands on time.  Sure, there’s kneading (I use my Kitchenaid Stand Mixer for that) but the remaining time is mostly rising and resting.  Not bad.  Even cooking them takes under 5 minutes.

While my pitas didn’t turn out that pocket-y they did turn out super delicious.  Sure I’m a sucker for any type of bread straight out of the oven but there’s something about homemade pitas that have won me over.  I can definitely see myself making these again and assuming I figure out the secret to making them more pocket-y (if desired) I probably won’t buy pita anymore.  But I get intense about things like that.

 

 

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One Response to Homemade Pita Bread

  1. The recipe is quite simple and only takes about an hour. There are 4 steps in the process of making pita bread – assembling the ingredients, forming and divide the dough, rolling out dough into flat circles and letting it rise, then baking the dough. Then, magically, the little flat pancake-like rounds puff into perfectly round pitas. The only hard part is then deciding what tasty ingredients to fill them with.

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