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---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02
 
      Title: LAVASH
 Categories: Breads, Turkish
      Yield: 8 servings
 
      1 pk Yeast
      2 c  Warm water
      2 tb Sugar
  5 1/2 c  All purpose flour
      2 ts Salt
 
  Lightly oil a bowl for the dough. Mix the yeast, water
  and sugar in a large mixing bowl. Add the flour and
  salt and mix until it forms a well-blended but
  somewhat soft dough. (resist the temptation to work in
  any more flour than absolutely necessary.) Knead the
  dough by hand or machine. If by hand, turn it out on a
  floured board and work it until it is smooth and
  elastic, approximately 10 minutes. If using a dough
  hook on an electric mixer, knead the dough at the
  slowest speed for about 5 minutes. Pat the dough into
  a ball and put it in the oiled bowl. Cover the dough
  with a kitchen towel and set it in a warm, draft-free
  place to rise until the dough has doubled in bulk,
  about 30 to 40 minutes.  (A perfect place is a gas
  oven with its slight heat given off by the pilot
  light; an electric oven, turned on low for no more
  than 2 minutes, then turned off, works equally well.)
  When the dough has doubled, turn it out on a floured
  board, punch it down, and knead it again until there
  is no air left in it.  Divide the dough into 8 round
  mounds, place them on the board, cover again with a
  towel, and let rise until almost doubled, about
  30-minutes. While the dough is rising, preheat the
  oven to 450F. Position a rack as close as possible to
  the oven bottom. Flour a 12x15-in baking sheet. When
  the 8 mounds of dough have risen, roll them out, one
  piece at a time into rectangles about 12x15 inches
  (the size of a standard sheet pan) and about as thin
  as for a pizza. Puncture the entire surface at
  1/2-inch intervals with the tines of a roasting fork.
  Bake the breads, one at a time, for 6 to 8 minutes, or
  until the tops are lightly browned.  Remove each
  finished bread to a wire rack to cool and continue
  baking the remaining breads until all 8 are finished.
  During the baking, if any large bubbles start to puff
  up, puncture them immediately with a fork. The bread
  in the Middle East is traditionally a type of cracker
  bread called lavash (lawasha in Assyrian). This flat
  leavened bread is available in grocery stores and
  specialty markets and can be eaten as a cracker in the
  dry, crisp form in which it comes.  However to serve
  along with a meal, it is preferable to dampen it so
  that it becomes more breadlike. Moisten the lavash,
  one cracker at a time, under cold running water,
  making sure that both sides are completely wet; place
  in a plastic bag for 3 hours, at the end of which time
  the bread will be pliable and chewy. Lavash prepared
  in this fashion is also used for Aram sandwiches. In
  the old country, a lavash bread would bake in a clay
  bottomed oven in 2 to 3 minutes. You can get much the
  same result baking on a ceramic baking tile or
  directly on the floor of a gas oven.
 
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