Pita Break Coupon Club Free Coupon – Canada
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Looking for some free Food And Drink Samples?Pita, pitta (pronounced / ˆpi t ™/ PEE-t ™) or Turkish bread is a round pocket bread widely consumed in many Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cuisines. It is prevalent from Turkey through the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula. The “pocket” in pita bread is created by steam, which puffs up the dough. As the bread cools and flattens, a pocket is left in the middle. The word pita has a mixed ancestry: from the Modern Hebrew pitt h, borrowed from the Judaeo-Spanish pita, borrowed in turn from modern Greek ¯ „ ±; and also directly from the modern Greek and related terms in other Balkan languages: Serbo-Croatian pita, Albanian pite, Bulgarian pita. Beyond that, the etymology is unclear. Though the Hebrew word pitt h is spelled like the Aramaic pitt ™ ¹ /pitt , which is related to Levantine Arabic fatteh, they are not connected historically. Pita is now the western name for the Arabic bread called khubz (ordinary bread), other breads of Arab or Egyptian, or kumaj (a Turkish loanword properly meaning a bread cooked in ashes), all baked in a brick oven. It is slightly leavened wheat bread, flat, either round or oval, and variable in size. The tenth-century Arab cookery book, Kitab al-Tabikh by ibn Sayyar al-Warraq, includes six recipes for khubz, all baked in a tannur, which is like the modern tandoor oven, in its Chapter 13. Historians believe its history extends far into antiquity, since flatbreads in general, whether leavened or not, are among the most ancient breads, needing no oven or even utensil for their baking. The first evidence of flat breads occur in and around Amorite Damascus. Pita is used to scoop sauces or dips such as hummus and to wrap kebabs, gyros or falafel in the manner of sandwiches. Most pita are baked at high temperatures (450 F or 232 C), causing the flattened rounds of dough to puff up dramatically. When removed from the oven, the layers of baked dough remain separated inside the deflated pita, which allows the bread to be opened into pockets, creating a space for use in various dishes.