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Flour, all-purp.
Flour, whole wheat
Baking Powder
Sugar
Salt
Milk, whole
Oil (1)
Oil for bowl
Oil for brushing
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See Gallery for more details and
photographic steps. These breads weigh about 4.4 ounces each. Figure they will
take about 5 minutes each.
Prep - (1-1/2 hrs - 40 min work)
- Select a large mixing bowl. I use an 11-1/2 inch medium depth stainless
steel bowl.
- Place all Dry Ingredients in the mixing bowl and whip together
until evenly distributed.
- Bring Milk up hot in a saucepan, just until you see a few bubbles
form at the edges of the pan.
- Stir in Milk, then 2 T Oil. Stir until you have a
kneadable dough. Adjust by slowly mixing in warm water or additional flour
as necessary. You should be able to handle it without it sticking to your
hands.
- Dust a work surface with a little Flour and turn out the dough
onto it. Knead the dough well, 10 to 15 minutes by hand or 5 minutes in
a stand mixer with dough hook. Finally, mold it into a roughly spherical
lump.
- Clean your mixing bowl and coat with 1 T Oil. Place the lump
of Dough in the bowl and tumble it around to coat with the oil.
Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel or plastic wrap and set in a
comfortably warm place for 45 minutes to an hour. An oven with just the
pilot light on is a good place. It should become a little soft and perhaps
just a trace puffy.
Form Sabaayad - (30 min)
- Place the Dough on a lightly floured surface and cut into 8
equal pieces. Mold the pieces into balls.
- Working one at a time, use a rolling pin to roll Dough out to
into a 1/4 inch thick oval about 9 inches long. Use a brush to coat the
top side of the oval with a thin coating of Oil.
- Fold the Oval in half, end to end. Now use the brush to coat the top
side of the folded oval and fold in half again.
- Using a rolling pin, roll the Folded Dough to about 1/4 inch
thick. I didn't like the elongated shape I got, so I oiled again, folded
again, and rolled back out to 1/4 inch thick. Repeat until all 8 pieces
are done.
Cook Sabaayad - (40 min)
- Make sure everything is ready to go.
- Bring your griddle up to about 400°F/200°C and give it time to
stabilize. I recommend an Infrared
Thermometer to confirm temperature.
- Wipe the surface of the griddle with a lump of paper towel soaked with
Oil. I do this even on my non-stick griddle.
- Place one or more Sabaayad on the griddle, depending on how much
space you have. Let cook until the top layer has mostly bubbled up from
the rest of the bread. The steam that forces the bubble up shows it is
nearly cooked through. The bottom side should be splotchy with brown
spots, medium dark. This will be about 3 to 4 minutes.
- Turn it over and press it down to squeeze out the bubble(s) so the whole
top side touches the griddle. Continue to cook until the other side is
attractively splotchy brown, as in the photos, another 3 minutes or so.
- Lift the cooked Sabaayad from the griddle and place aside to
cool a bit. A straw mat is a good place to let them cool down before
stacking.
- Re-oil the pan and repeat until all the Sabaayad are done.
- Serve warm - see Serving. Bagged in plastic,
this bread will keep a day at room temperature, or for several days in
the fridge. It can be revived by briefly heating on the griddle, 2 or
3 minutes per side.
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