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Pita

Pita or pitta, also known as Arabic bread, Arab bread, Syrian bread, Lebanese bread, pocket bread, and pide (Turkish) is a family of yeast-leavened round flatbreads baked from wheat flour, common in the Mediterranean, Middle East, and neighboring areas. It includes the widely known version with an interior pocket. In the United Kingdom, the term is used for pocket versions such as the Greek pita, used for barbecues as a souvlaki wrap. The Western name pita may sometimes be used to refer to various other types of flatbreads that have different names in their local languages, such as numerous styles of Arab khubz.

Etymology
The first mention of the word in English cited in the Oxford English Dictionary was in 1936. The English word is borrowed from Modern Greek (, ), in turn from Byzantine Greek (attested in 1108), or from (, ), which may have passed to Latin as cf. pizza. Other hypotheses trace the Greek word back to the Classical Hebrew word (, ). or Illyrian intermediaries. Some say that English borrowed the word directly from Modern Hebrew, which had revived the Aramaic term in the preceding decades. The word has been borrowed by the Turkish language as , and appears in the Balkan languages as Bosnian-Serbian-Croatian , Romanian , Albanian , and Bulgarian or ; however, in the Serbo-Croatian languages of the countries comprising the former Yugoslavia, the word is used in a general sense meaning pie. In Arabic, the phrase (, ) is sometimes used; other names are simply (khubz|, ), (, ) or (, ). In Egypt, it is called eish baladi ( ) or simply eish ( , ), although other subtypes of "bread" are common in Egypt, such as eish fino and eish merahrah. In Greek, () is understood by default to refer to the thicker, pocketless Greek pita, whereas the thinner khubz-style pita is referred to as (, ). ==History==
History
Pita has roots in the prehistoric flatbreads of the Near East. Ancient wheat and barley were among the earliest domesticated crops in the Neolithic period of about 10,000 years ago, in the Fertile Crescent. By 4,000 years ago, bread was of central importance in societies such as the Babylonian culture of Mesopotamia, where the earliest-known written records and recipes of bread-making originate, and where pita-like flatbreads cooked in a tinûru (tannur or tandoor) were a basic element of the diet, and much the same as today's tandoor bread, taboon bread, and laffa, an Iraqi flatbread with many similarities with pita. However, there is no record of the steam-puffed, two-layer "pocket pita" in the ancient texts, or in any of the medieval Arab cookbooks, and according to food historians such as Charles Perry and Gil Marks it was likely a later development. ==Preparation==
Preparation
Most pita breads are baked at high temperatures (), which turns the water in the dough into steam, thus causing the pita to puff up and form a pocket. Modern commercial pita bread is prepared on advanced automatic production lines, processing silos of flour at a time and producing thousands of pitas per hour. The ovens used in commercial baking are much hotter than traditional clay ovens——so each pita is baked only for one minute. The pita are then air-cooled for about 20 minutes on conveyor belts before being shipped immediately or else stored in commercial freezers kept at a temperature of . ==Culinary use==
Culinary use
in Nablus. Pita can be used to scoop sauces or dips, such as hummus, or to wrap kebabs, gyros, Sabich or falafel in the manner of sandwiches. It can also be cut and baked into crispy pita chips. In Turkish cuisine, the word pide may refer to three different styles of bread: a flatbread similar to that eaten in Greece and Arab countries, a pizza-like dish, içli pide, where the filling is placed on the (often boat-shaped) dough before baking, Traditional breads in Greek cuisine are leavened loaves, such as the round καρβέλι karvéli or the oblong φραντζόλα frantzóla. This style of pita flatbread, in the English language meaning of the word, is almost exclusively used as a wrap for souvlaki or gyros usually garnished with some combination of tzatziki sauce, tomatoes, onions, and french fries. Druze pita is filled with labneh (thick yoghurt) and topped with olive oil and za'atar. In Bosnia, Croatia, Bulgaria and Serbia, the local style of pitta is known as lepinja, somun, purlenka or pitica, and is the most common bread served with barbecued food like ćevapi, pljeskavica, kebapche or grilled sausages. The word pita itself, on the other hand, is used for pie in the general sense in all local languages, and is mostly used for börek or various sweet phyllo pastry dishes (with the exception of baklava which is always called that). Pita is also present in the cuisine of the Aromanians. File:Raffi_kojian-pita-103035037.jpg|Arabic bread package in US with English, Armenian and Arabic text File:Lunch at the beach North of Jaffa (4158698648).jpg|Hummus platter served with Pita near Jaffa in Tel Aviv File:Pide and ayran.jpg|Karadeniz pidesi from Turkey topped with kaşar cheese File:Palestinianbreakfastfalafel.jpg|Arab breakfast with falafel, hummus, torshi and khubz bread File:Tırnaklı pide 1.jpg|Ramadan pide File:Jerusalem shawarma.jpg|Shawarma in Jerusalem File:Gyro sandwich (3).jpg|Gyro pide wrap File:Baked pita on conveyor belt in Tell Rifaat.jpg|Baked khubz on conveyor in Tell Rifaat, Syria File:Manisa kebabı.jpg|Kebab served over pide with pilav File:Bosnian-cevapi-with-kajmak-and-onion.jpg|Bosnian ćevapi served with local pitta variety called "somun" ==See also==
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