How to Make Fresh Homemade Pita Bread
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Making fresh pita at home couldn’t be easier, which was a shocking discovery. This easy recipe for homemade pita bread uses instant yeast and requires no kneading or complicated shaping. The pita rounds balloon into perfect pockets in 2 minutes in the oven. Hooray!
Store-bought pita leaves much to be desired. Upon surveying a few friends on the subject of pita, the word that came up repeatedly was “cardboard.”
This descriptor, I think, is mostly fair. Pita hasn’t caught up to naan and tortillas, which even at semi-mass produced levels* can taste quite good.
But how nice for us? We have another project to add to our bread-baking bucket lists.
But to call pita making a “project” is actually unfair. Making pita couldn’t be easier, which was shocking to discover. Before embarking on this journey a few weeks ago, I expected to learn a complicated folding or shaping technique, a trick to make the dough balloon into that beautiful, open pocket, perfect for stuffing with falafel or chicken souvlaki or grilled vegetables with tzatziki and hummus.
Making pita, I learned, requires neither kneading nor complicated shaping. It’s one of the easiest bread recipes you could make in fact, right up there with no-knead focaccia and homemade pizza dough. The recipe below is essentially a half recipe of my mother’s peasant bread recipe with the water reduced slightly to make the dough easier to ball up and roll out.
How to Make Pita: An Overview
- Whisk together flour, salt, and instant yeast.
- Add lukewarm water and olive oil.
- Stir to combine with a spatula; then mix briefly with your hands, just until the dough comes together, about 30 seconds.
- Let rise 1.5 hours.
- Portion into balls and let rest 30 minutes.
- Roll each ball into a 6-inch round. Let rest again for 15 minutes; then bake for 2 minutes in a hot oven.
So what’s the secret to creating that beautiful, open pocket? Two things:
- Gentle handling of the dough during the rolling process — you don’t want to deflate all of the air bubbles created while the dough was rising. And letting the dough rest for another 15 minutes after you roll it — this allows the dough to recover a bit from the rolling and to puff slightly back up again before baking.
- A hot surface. As you may know, I am a huge fan of the Baking Steel for pizza, and I love it for pita for the same reason: it quickly transfers heat to the dough, making it instantly spring:
If you don’t have a Baking Steel or pizza stone, you have a few options. First, heat your oven to 475ºF. Then:
- Place a cast iron skillet in the oven, and let it heat for at least 5 minutes; then bake each round one at a time for 2-3 minutes total.
- Place a sheet pan in the oven, and let it heat for at least 5 minutes; then bake three rounds at a time for 2-3 minutes total.
Preheated skillet method:
Preheated sheet pan method:
I did test a non-preheated sheet pan, and the result was uneven: one pita puffed, one did not:
Anticipating some questions…
Can I use whole wheat flour here?
Sure, but before you do, ask yourself what is your goal? If you truly care about nutritional value, whole wheat flour (commercial whole wheat flour at least) might not be the answer.
There is a fair amount of evidence that suggests commercial whole wheat flour is not in fact more nutritious than white flour, and you can read more about that here.
If you can get your hands on some freshly milled, stone-milled flour, that type of flour will offer nutritional value as well as flavor, aroma, and color. If you chose to add some whole wheat flour, I would use no more than 50% (1 cup or 128g). You may also need to adjust the water level if you use some whole wheat flour — reference the video and add more water slowly until the dough looks similar to the dough in the video.
How can I make these ahead of time?
The baked pita will stay fresh for about 3 days stored in an airtight container or bag. Reheat before serving. You can also freeze the pita for up to three months.
Finally, as with nearly all leavened breads, use the refrigerator as needed during the rising period. You can:
- …stick the bowl of just-mixed dough in the fridge and let it rise for as long as a day.
- …deflate the risen dough (after 1.5 hours or so), and stick it in the fridge for as long as a day.
- …stick the portioned balls in the fridge for several hours or for as long as a day.
* Regarding store-bought naan and tortillas: I love the Stonefire Naan brand, and Caramelo Flour Tortillas are exceptional.
Here’s the play-by-play: Gather your ingredients. As always: use a digital scale for best results; if you don’t own one, I can’t recommend investing in one enough — it will change your baking forever.
Whisk together flour, salt, and instant yeast. Add water and olive oil.
Mix with a spatula until you have a shaggy dough — mixture will feel dry.
Use your hands to briefly knead the mass into a dough ball. Drizzle with olive oil. Turn to coat. Cover bowl with a cloth bowl cover, and let rise in a warm spot for 1.5 hours or until …
… slightly puffed.
Turn out onto a lightly floured work surface, knead briefly, then use a bench scraper to divide the mass into 6 roughly equal portions. If you’re using a scale, each portion should weigh about 73 grams.
Shape each portion into a ball; then let rest for 30 minutes. This allows the gluten to relax, and as with these buttery soft pretzels, the brief rest will make them easier to roll out into rounds.
Flatten each ball with your hands; then working with one round at a time, roll into a 6-inch round.
Transfer each round to a sheet of parchment paper. Let rest for another 15 minutes. Meanwhile, heat a Baking Steel or pizza stone to 550ºF. (Note: If using a stone, reference the manufacturer’s manual regarding heat tolerance.)
Bake three rounds at a time for 2-3 minutes, or until lightly golden.
Transfer freshly baked pita to a towel-lined bowl. Wrap to cover until ready to eat.
How to Make Fresh Homemade Pita Bread
- Total Time: 3 hours 4 minutes
- Yield: 6
Description
Making fresh pita at home couldn’t be easier, which was a shocking discovery. This easy recipe for homemade pita bread uses instant yeast and requires no kneading or complicated shaping. The pita rounds balloon into perfect pockets in 2 minutes in the oven. Hooray!
Notes:
To create a warm place to rise: Preheat your oven for 1 minute; then shut it off.
Parchment paper sheets: If you buy the parchment paper that comes in sheets, such as the If You Care brand, you can fold the sheet lengthwise, then into thirds widthwise and cut along the creases to create 6 equal pieces.
If you don’t have instant yeast, you can use active-dry yeast. Simply sprinkle it over the lukewarm water, and let it stand for 15 minutes; then proceed with the recipe.
See other notes in the post for using your refrigerator during the rising process and for alternate methods of cooking if you don’t have a Baking Steel or pizza stone.
Ingredients
2 cups (256 g) all-purpose flour, plus more for sprinkling
1 teaspoon (5 g) kosher salt
1 teaspoon (4 g) instant yeast, see notes above
165 g (scant 3/4 cup) lukewarm water
1 tablespoon (14 g) olive oil, plus more for drizzling
Instructions
- Mix the dough: In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, and instant yeast. Add the water and oil. Stir with a spatula until a shaggy dough forms — the mixture will appear dry and unevenly mixed. Use your hands to knead the dough briefly in the bowl just until the flour is absorbed and you have a sticky ball, about 30 seconds. Drizzle a little olive oil over top, turn the dough to coat, cover bowl with a tea towel, and transfer to a warm place (see notes above) to rise for 1.5 hours.
- Heat oven with a Baking Steel or stone inside at 550ºF. Cut a sheet of parchment paper into 6 small pieces about 6-inches square, see notes above.
- Portion the dough: Turn out the dough onto a lightly floured work surface. Knead briefly to form a ball. Use a bench scraper to divide the dough into 6 equal portions — each ball should roughly weigh 73 g. Using flour as needed to prevent sticking, ball up each portion, using the pinky edges of your fingers to create tension (see video for guidance). Let rest 30 minutes.
- Roll out each ball: Flatten one ball, and, using flour as needed, gently roll out with a rolling pin until you have a 6-inch round — the key is to not roll too aggressively in order to prevent the air pockets from being forced out. If a round is resisting, set it aside, begin rolling out another one, and return to the stubborn one at the end. Transfer each 6-inch round to a sheet of parchment paper. Let rest 15 minutes.
- Bake the pita: When oven has preheated, use a pizza peel to shimmy one round at a time, parchment paper and all, onto the preheated Baking Steel. I like to cook 3 at a time. Set timer for 2 minutes. If the pita is lightly golden, it’s done. Remove pita, transfer to a tea towel-lined bowl, and close the towel. Repeat with the remaining 3 rounds of pita.
- Store pita at room temperature in an airtight bag or container for 3 days or freeze for up to 3 months. Reheat before serving.
- Prep Time: 3 hours
- Cook Time: 4 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Yeast
- Cuisine: Mediterranean
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
506 Comments on “How to Make Fresh Homemade Pita Bread”
Thanks for this pita recipe. It came out so fluffy and soft — so much better than store-bought pita. And really not a difficult recipe too — much easier than many other bread recipes.
Great to hear this, Fei! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
OMG!!!!!!! ‘Reinforce your pita my inserting the end you cut off down into the pita” My mind is blown…I NEVER EVEN THOUGHT OF THAT!!!! Can’t wait to try these…so easy…no more cardboard!!!!!
Hope you love them, Shelley!!
I don’t have a “baking steel” but I have a baking stone?? Will that work??
Yes!
fantastic recipe ! Super straight forward video too – mine looked exactly like yours 😁
Might not ever buy pita again ! Thank you !
So great to read this, Shirley 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing!
What is the best way to reheat from frozen?
I would thaw at room temperature overnight; then reheat for 15 to 20 minutes at 350ºF.
Thanks for doing all the recepies here and on youtube. Have you ever tried with sourdough? I would love to see you receipe.
Hi Annie! I have not tried this one with sourdough … it’s just so fast and easy with yeast. I imagine you could simply omit the yeast, use 50 grams sourdough starter, and increase all of the fermentation times.
Hello Ali, thank you for sharing your recipe. It’s super hot right now to turn on the oven, is it possible to cook them on the stove?
Hi! I haven’t tried, but I imagine it would work just fine! I do this with tortillas and naan, and it works beautifully.
Amazing! I just made these tonight. They came out great! Thank you!
Great to hear, Kathy 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks for writing!
OMG – these are amazing and so easy.
Great to hear, Jen 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thanks so much for writing.
I know it’s a legit bread recipe when two things are present:
1. Instant yeast
2. Measurements by weight
Can’t wait to try it, they look amazing!
Hope you love it, Jesse!
This recipe looks amazing I can’t wait to try it!! Do you think a glass baking dish would work? I lost a bunch of cookware and it’s all I have right now
Hi Syd! I wouldn’t preheat the glass baking dish… I worry about you ruining it. You can try simply baking the pita in the glass pan, but I’m not sure you’ll get the spring you are looking for.
Do you think I could bake it in a small pizza oven
I do! Definitely keep an eye on it the entire time to ensure it doesn’t burn.
You are wonderful! I love how you’ve given so much detail about every step. I’ve tried a lot of pita recipes before but the results this time have been amazing. All my pitas ballooned. The six inch diameter and the dough ball weight really made sure I got it perfect on the first try!
Thank you so much for the amazing recipe!
Great to hear, Amina! Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
These pita’s look delicious! So fluffy!
I would like to make mini pita’s, just cut the amount of pieces in half again? And, is the baking time the same?
Yes to halving the pitas! I think the baking time will be about the same, but keep an eye on them 🙂
This was amazingly delicious and so easy! If I want to bake them moments before guests arrive, what’s the recommended way to sequence and pause the steps? Can I roll them out and let then just sit under a damp tea towel or is there a better suggestion? Thank you!
Great to hear, Mark! Yes, I think that should work. My only concern is the dough drying out so I think the damp towel will protect them sufficiently.
Can I use Sourdough instead of yeast
Sure!
You have ruined my life! Jk. My husband WILL NOT eat store bought pita any longer. I have to make sure it’s available for his salads (loves to stuff it in there🙃) at all times. I double the recipe🙂 Luckily it freezes beautifully. In all honesty I haven’t met a recipe of yours we didn’t love. If I say “it’s an Ali recipe” there’s no hesitation. Much love for all you do, videos are awesome. Pita for the win🥰
You’ve created a monster!!! But I’m not sad to hear this 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thank you so much for writing and sharing your notes. And thank you for your kind words, too. Means so much.
I’ve attempted to make this dough twice without success. I’ve measured perfectly but my dough seems to be so dry after kneading and hasn’t budged after 1.5-2 hours. Any suggestions? Thank you!
Hi Amber! Are you using a scale to measure? What type of yeast? What type of flour?
You’re likely adding too much flour relative to the amount of water, so you can add water by the tablespoon until it matches the consistency of the dough in the video.
Okay- took another go at it with weighing all ingredients and success! Thank you so much for responding and educating! So easy and the family loved it! Your recipes are incredible!
Great to hear, Amber! Thanks so much for reporting back and thanks for the kind words, too 🙂
Came out perfect! Used a cast iron baking pan and it worked great. Enjoyed them filled with roasted vegetables and hummus, mmmm. Thanks for a great recipe.
Great to hear, Michele! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
Made this recipe today and it was easy to follow . Pitas came out delicious. Thank you
Great to hear, Jenny!
Thank you for this easy recipe!! I had traditional active dry yeast and followed the directions in the recipe…but found it a bit yeasty tasting. Should I have used less?
Yes, use less yeast next time.
I want to try your recipe… My Lebanese grandmother made this bread, but it was thicker. To achieve this, do you think I could make the dough balls larger and not roll out as thin?
I do! Go for it. Please share your results if you give it a try. I’d love to try that as well.
I’ve made these twice now and the recipe is so forgiving, time-wise. The first time I stuck to the recipe as written except for an extra minute in the oven and they were perfect! This time I made them, rolled them out, and then realized they were about forty minutes early. I just let them sit on my kitchen counter and baked them once the rest of dinner was just about done and they were STILL perfect. Thank you so much for such an easy hit!
So nice to read this, Adi! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
Ive seen recipes cooking d pita stovetop. Is it possible with this recipe?
Worth a shot! Go for it. I cook tortillas stovetop and they kind of balloon up like pita.
I just made these and love them and will made them again. I have two questions..1) can we double the dough recipe with no problem? 2) You say to not be to aggressive with dough to prevent air pockets from being forced out…I was just able to roll them to 5 inches…wondering what I am doing wrong…..should I have continued…..and had to bake them on my pizza stone for longer but so good!
Hi Diane! Yes, double with no problem. Regarding the rolling, next time, try a more aggressive rolling until you get to 6 inches and see what happens. I probably was being overly cautious with those instructions. I’m always amazed by the bubbles I get with flour tortillas, and I roll those out very thinly and aggressively.
Another perfect recipe. And this one is also a party trick! Thank you! I doubled for a “build your own pita” dinner and subbed spelt for 200g of the 512g of flour (mostly for flavor). It needed a little more water for consistency. Really appreciated the ease of sneaking this recipe into a busy day with multiple fridge rests while out chauffeuring kids. Baked right before we ate (on cast iron) and my husband and guests used the word “alchemy” to describe the transformation from flat disks to puffy pillows. 🙂 Delicious!
Awwww how fun to read all of this 🙂 🙂 🙂 I bet the spelt lent both a wonderful flavor and hue. I’ll try that next time around. Love the idea of a build-your-own-pita dinner as well. Fun!
WOW!! Firstly, I appreciate a recipe that’s so well tested and instructed that it makes me, a first timer, look like a PRO!! Biting into one of these fresh pillows of heaven was next level. I love that they’re super simple to whip up too. I popped two cast iron pans into a 500 degree oven (my oven max temp) and they were perfect in 4 minutes. My family just raved about them! I will be making these regularly from this day forward no doubt. Thanks, Ali!
Great to hear, Enza! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of this including your baking notes, which will be so helpful for others.
Hi Alexandra!
I love this recipe, but I don’t have a baking stone.
I’m wondering if you have any tricks to help ensure they poof on a griddle? The griddle surface is a half inch think and I can crank it up to 500 F, but they are still not poofing so I can’t make yummy pocket sammies with them consistently. Help!
Hi! Do you have a cast iron skillet? or an old sheet pan? You can use those as you would a baking stone: preheat them as directed, then shimmy the shaped pita rounds on to the hot surface.
Some people have had success using their skillets on their stovetops as well.
Hi Ali! I usually love your recipes. I had a problem with mine. It didn’t balloon/puff up like yours did and took awhile to brown.I didn’t have a stone so I had to use a preheated baking pan at 475F for 5-6 minutes. Do you know why it didn’t rise as much while in the oven? Would appreciate the help! Tasted great though.
Hi Suri, it’s likely because your pan wasn’t hot enough or you didn’t let the shaped dough rounds rest long enough before baking.
Hi. I’m really looking forward to making these, past attempts with other recipies have been failures. In the video I see the baking steel is on the top rack but in some of the pictures, the sheet pan and skillet are lower in the oven. I’m going to use a pizza stone, should it go on the top rack? If I use the top rack, there’s only 2.5″ from the top of my stone to the heating element. How far down do you think I should put the stone? Thanks!
So sorry I didn’t see this, Deana! So glad it worked out 🙂