Homemade Flatbread {Greek Pocketless Pitas with a Simple Tutorial}
Get this recipe for simple and delicious homemade flatbread! With a step-by-step tutorial, it’s easier than you think!
Flatbread is yummy. Soft, fluffy homemade flatbread is even yummier.
If you are wondering why on earth you would ever want to make your own flatbread, I have two words for you: Chicken Gyros.
And wait!
Four more: Big Fat Greek Tacos. And how about? Simple Pita Pizzas.
The truth is, I could bombard you with a hundred more words that sum up why flatbread needs to be part of your life but I won’t (phew!).
Basically, this flatbread is extremely versatile; you could use it in so many different ways and it is really simple to make.
Those of you who have seen or made the soft wrap bread (that I adore) and/or this lovely naan bread (which I also adore) may want to know how this current flatbread differs.
It’s slightly thinner and a bit softer than the naan (so it bends easier) and has a completely different taste than the soft wrap bread (since the soft wrap bread has a potato base).
I think the moral of this story, though, is you can never have too many flatbread recipes in your recipe notebook.
Right? Right.
I included a few simple step-by-step photos of rolling and cooking the flatbread. Once you see it, you’ll realize how easy it is.
I always double or triple this batch, fire up the griddle and cook my heart out so I can freeze these babies to pull out at a moment’s notice.
We really do capitalize on the simple pita pizza thing (throw it under the broiler with all the toppings for a minute or so and you are good to go) as well as rolling up our favorite sandwich fixings for lunch.
Flatbread! It’s a really good thing.
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Homemade Flatbread {Greek Pocketless Pitas}
Ingredients
- 2 teaspoons instant yeast
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
- ⅔ cup warm water, about 100 degrees, warm but not hot to the touch
- ½ cup warm milk, about 100 degrees, warm but not hot to the touch
- 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3 cups (426 g) bread flour, more or less (see note)
Instructions
- In a large bowl (or bowl of an electric stand mixer fitted with the dough hook), mix the yeast, sugar water, milk, oil, salt and one cup of the flour until well combined.
- Gradually add the remaining flour until a soft dough is formed. It will pull away from the sides of the bowl to form a ball but still be slightly soft to the touch (see the note). Knead the dough for 4-5 minutes until it is soft and smooth.
- Place the dough in a lightly greased bowl and cover with greased plastic wrap; let rise until doubled, about an hour or so.
- Divide the dough into six or eight equal pieces. Cover with a cloth or plastic wrap and let the dough pieces rest for 10-15 minutes (this helps relax the gluten so they are easier to roll out).
- Working with one piece at a time, on a lightly greased or floured counter, roll the dough about 1/8-inch thick into a large circle, about 7-8 inches in diameter.
- Heat a griddle or skillet to medium heat (I preheat my electric griddle to 300 degrees). When the griddle/skillet is hot, cook the flatbread for 2-3 minutes on the first side until it bubbles and puffs. Flip it over with a pair of tongs and cook on the second side until it is golden and spotty. If the skillet isn’t hot enough, the bread can turn out dry (and won’t bend easily) from being overcooked so look for the right amount of heat that will cook the flatbread in 2-3 minutes max per side.
- Transfer the flatbread to a plate or work surface and cover with a clean kitchen towel. Repeat with the remaining dough (I can fit two pieces of flatbread on my electric griddle so I roll out two at a time), stacking each warm flatbread on top of the others and covering with the towel.
- The flatbread can be made, cooked, cooled and frozen with great results. It is best served the day it is made but can be reheated gently the day after, if needed.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: adapted from Jaclyn at Cooking Classy (reduced sugar, oil and salt, used instant yeast and adapted bread flour amounts, as well as adapting the method a bit)
I have made this recipe several times, and love it each time! It also works great to use leftovers for pizza.
Realized halfway through the process of cooking these that there was NO WAY my family was going to be satisfied with only one batch— the second batch is rising now! Perfect recipe, thank you!
This flatbread is a staple in my house! If we have left overs I turn them into pizzas. Love this recipe!
These turned out excellent! I cooked them in a cast iron skillet and loved the result.
Las preparé esta mañana y estoy encantada!!!!…facilísimo y para acompañar con miles de opciones, dulces o saladas. L@s ánimo a que prueben hacerlas…se enamoraran!
Not that you need another rave review of this wonderful bread, but I’ll add mine anyway! This turned out so nice. I made 10 pieces, and they were the perfect size for our Chicken Shawarma. I used White Lily flour, which I like for your naan bread. Thanks so much.
Fantastic recipe- we love these flatbreads. So much better than anything store bought. Anyone add spices or garlic to the recipe?
I’ve made these twice and my family really loves them! I can’t seem to get them as thin and large as you describe though. I read through all the comments and saw someone mention the bread being too elastic-y which is what I’m struggling with. I followed what you said and let them rest twice, once after I formed into balls and again after I rolled them out. That helped a tiny bit but we still thought they were too thick and not very pliable. Perhaps I’m overflouring. Or maybe I need a better quality flour? I usually use King Arther when baking with all purpose but just bought the generic brand of bread flour for this recipe . Any thoughts?
Hi Nancy – I think most times my flatbreads are on the thick end, too. Overflouring will tend to make them harder to roll thin – but it’s a tricky balance to make sure the dough isn’t so sticky that it’s a mess to roll them out. I believe someone mentioned (on this post or another, I can’t remember) that they roll out between sheets of greased parchment paper. I wonder if that would help?
I love, love this recipe!! So good. You are going to think I am crazy, but we make your Banh Mi sandwiches (one of the best.sandwiches.ever.) and use this flatbread instead of the baguettes. They are amazing. Thanks so much for this site!
I don’t think that’s crazy at all! In fact, I’m totally going to copy you! 🙂
Hi Mel! Love your naan and flatbread recipes. I have a question though. Every time I make this or the naan, I get them rolled out into a nice thin circle, but as soon as I pick them up to put them on the griddle, they shrink to about 1/2 the size of the original circle. Like a rubber band. What can I do to prevent this, so that my breads stay bigger?
Hey Melanie – letting them rest once they have been rolled out will relax the gluten and they’ll shrink less. A little shrinkage is likely no matter what, but it can be minimized if there’s good resting periods in between.
Great, thank you!!
I will never buy pita bread again! These turned out to be amazing!
What kind of griddle do you use? I have had terrible luck getting one that will maintain a steady temperature!
I’ve had this one before and it’s pretty good:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005FYF3OY/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
The one I have now isn’t available anymore (which is ok – it’s not the greatest griddle).
Mel I am addicted to your cooking sight. Your yeast breads are always spot on…and I love them. I was wondering if your ever use a tortilla press. I’ve made this recipe in larger batches before, and I dread the rolling out part…..any thoughts?
Hey Andrea – I have a tortilla press but have had lousy luck using it for this recipe. The dough doesn’t press very well (kind of springy with the yeast in it, I think?). But you might have better luck than me!
I never comment on recipes, but this is the second one of yours I’ve made now and they’ve both been hits! This flatbread is perfect! We love donairs but can’t get them in our city. Any pita, flatbread, and naan we’ve bought is never as good as what donair shops use. Thank you for this recipe! Now we can have really good donairs anytime we want.
Thanks, Nikki!
I made this for dinner tonight, we can not have salt so left that out. I rolled it very thin, one at a time as I did it on the stove. Turned out so good, I was able to roll my meat in the flat bread. This was the first time for the flat bread, will make more for sure. I took a picture but do not see how to put it on here.
These are easy and so tender and delicious!
These look great – can I make these with soy milk instead of cow’s milk? Also, I’m new to all this cooking stuff – what’s the difference between active dried yeast and instant yeast? They sound very similar!
I haven’t tried a dairy milk substitute, but you could definitely experiment. Also, here’s a post i did a while back on the differences in yeast. https://www.melskitchencafe.com/tutorial-working-with-yeast/
These turned out delicious! I made chicken wraps with some grilled chicken, potato wedges, tomatoes, fried mushrooms and sweet corn. Even my dad (very picky!) loved the wraps, he ended up having two!
I swear this recipe used to have potato flakes in it…or am I crazy?!?
I think you are thinking of this recipe: https://www.melskitchencafe.com/soft-wrap-bread/
This turned out really well! I need to work on my dividing and shaping, but they turned out well and were tasty. I did a double batch to make sure we had plenty. Served with some grilled chicken I marinated with lemon, garlic, oregano, and olive oil, plus hummus, kalamata olives, cucumbers, grilled artichoke hearts, and roasted red peppers, and it felt like a fun feast.
These are so delicious! I have made them before and I’m making them again tonight. Hopefully they last until dinner because last time I was eating them plain! Thank you for a great recipe!
Made this yesterday! It was great. Can this dough be made a day ahead.
Sure, I don’t see why not…just take it out of the refrigerator in time to come to room temperature before making the flatbreads.
Five stars!
HOLY MOLY. Let me premise by saying I always manage to mess recipes up. Especially when it involves dough. But we used this recipe to compliment our homemade gyros tonight and I was losing my mind at how simple and absolutely delicious this was. We’re so excited to have this recipe to use [many times] in the years to come. Thank you so much!
Excellent bread. It goes with practically everything.
Good recipe, but these were HUGE. I portioned my dough into eight pieces and each one still took up the entire griddle (a double-burner griddle). So just a word to the wise: make them smaller unless you want ginormous breads.
Mine didn’t turn out nearly as brown but I was afraid to cook them longer because I didn’t want them to dry out. Good flavor. Maybe my griddle a little hotter? It was set to 300.
Yes, I think more heat would help.
Almost like the ones we had in Crete first time of making turned out great
This is really the perfect tiganopsomo.
Delicious, soft and pliable (!!), easy to make and perfect for souvlaki.
I love it. Thanks for sharing!!
I want to try this pita bed. i’ve tried many rexipes already but I end up having a hard dry pita that hard to bite. The first min. I cook it is ok but after an hour its becoming hard. Even if i cover it. I hooe this one is soft.
I tried this but when I tried rolling after placing fillings,it started breaking/crumbling, what causes that?
Sometimes if the individual breads have cooked too long, it can cause them to break apart when rolling (or if the dough was over floured).
This has become my go-to flat bread recipe. It’s fluffy and cooks up perfect every time.
Easy to follow, and fabulous results. Thanks Mel.
i am obsessed with all your recipes and one this has become such a family favourite!! so fun to make with the kids!
I absolutely love this bread! It is nice and thick, soft and pliable. It’s perfect for gyros and as an accompaniment to souvlaki with homemade tzatziki sauce. I am making this on the grill tonight and will double the batch so I can freeze some. Thanks for the great recipe Mel! This is the best one on the internet.
Thanks, Marianne!
Would a milk alternative work for this recipe (such as unflavored almond milk)?
Thank you,
Cassandra
Definitely worth a try! I haven’t used it myself but I think it could work
Can I use regular fluid instead of bread flour?
Flour*
Yes, you can. The flatbread will have a slightly less soft/chewy texture, but it should work.
I tried this recipe today with intent to create a copycat taco bell chicken flatbread, these were delicious!
I do not have a flat bed, can I use a thick base pan?
Sure.
I don’t own a griddle. I do, however, own a rectangular pizza stone that is just a few inches smaller than my oven racks. I think I will try cooking these on that. I have seen recipes for Naan – Indian Flat Bread, that is cooked that way. One at a time in a frying pan would be a lengthy process.
Obviously, I should have won that griddle during your FB live.
Thank you for the great recipe ideas and for being thorough.
Yes! A pizza stone would work great, too. That’s how I cook my pocket pita bread.
So bake them @ 300* rather than frying? Turning at 2-3 min..?
Trying it this way did not work for me so I fried them in my skillet.
We love these for personal pan pizzas at our house. I let the kids pick their topping and broil 2 minutes. Talk about a quick dinner. Doing it for my sons 11th bday party tomorrow.
These are my go-to recipe for homemade pita flatbread!
I’ve made these several times and they are always amazing! Last night I was brave and made them right on the grill and they were soooo good!! I’ll never make them on the stove top again. Thanks Mel for another super recipe to feed my brood!
Excelente!! Cambie algunos ingredientes Como la Leche por leche de almendras(leche de coco) y los flatbreads quedaron riquisimos y MI pequeña familia los amo!!
I just found your website. I tried this recipe and it is fabulous! Thank you for sharing your recipes!
Michel Cousineau
Montreal, Canada
Sweet merciful crap, this an an awesome recipe. So, so good. We’re having the Big Fat Greek Tacos tonight (which we eat fairly often), but this is the first time I have made the flat bread. I will never go back and am now thinking about making baked chips with them and the dips I could serve them with.
Thank you for doing what you do, Mel. There isn’t a week that goes by that I don’t make a recipe from your site. So many of them are now family recipes that I hope my 3 year old will make for her own friends and family. Thank you.
Thank you, Leslie!
What if I wanted to make 2 Pitas how would I convert the recipe?
I’ve never adapted it that way, you’d have to experiment cutting down the measurements. Good luck!
Brilliant!
I just made these and they are fab – just what I wanted for a lunch tomorrow involving slow cooked shredded lamb and tzatziki! Thanks!
I just made this dough last night, let it rise once, then punched the dough down and refrigerated it overnight becaise I want freshly made pitas.
I just made them and wrapped them in foil. I have a bag with these pitas, sliced homemade gyros meat, homemade tzaziki sauce and salad. I have a portable gas stove and frying pan to hear everything up and am about to go to the desert with my husband where we will be having gyros sandwiches…. Ooooh I can’t wait to try these pitas with everything!!!
Just made them…… Oh dear Lord best ever!!!!!!
I made these this morning. They were absolutely fantastic!!! I put some San Marzano tomatoes that I put through the food mill, with mozarella balls cheese and fresh basil. It was fantastic. We put deer meat dredged in flour cooked in a little olive oil, onions and garlic in another for my husband and for mine I put Nutella on it with toasted pumpkin seeds. I have two left I put in a bag in the refrigerator for my husbands breakfast tomorrow.