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Pita

Pita (/ˈpɪtə/ or US: /ˈptə/)[2] or pitta (British English) is a family of yeast-leavened round flatbreads baked from wheat flour, common in the Mediterranean, Levant, and neighboring areas. It includes the widely known version with an interior pocket, also known as Arabic bread (Arabic: خبز عربي; khubz ʿArabī). In the United Kingdom, Greek bread is used for pocket versions such as the Greek pita, and are used for barbecues as a souvlaki wrap.[3][4][1][5][6][7] 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 (bread).[8]

Pita
Pita from Greece
Alternative namesPide, Khubz
TypeFlatbread
Region or stateEastern Mediterranean, Middle East [1]
Main ingredientsWheat flour, water, yeast, salt
  •   Media: Pita

History edit

Pita has roots in the prehistoric flatbreads of the Near East.[1] There is evidence from about 14,500 years ago, during the Stone Age, that the Natufian people in what is now Jordan made a kind of flatbread from wild cereal grains.[9][10] 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,[11] 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,[12] 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.[1][13]

Etymology edit

The first mention of the word in English cited in the Oxford English Dictionary was in 1936.[14] The English word is borrowed from Modern Greek πίτα (píta, "bread, cake, pie"), in turn from Byzantine Greek (attested in 1108),[14] possibly from Ancient Greek πίττα (pítta) or πίσσα (píssa), both "pitch/resin" for the gloss,[15][16] or from πικτή (piktḗ, "fermented pastry"), which may have passed to Latin as picta cf. pizza.[17][18][19] In Levantine Arabic it evolved into fatteh, (since Old Arabic /p/ evolved into /f/).[14] Other hypotheses trace the word back to the Classical Hebrew word פת (patt, lit. "a morsel of bread").[1] It is spelled like the Aramaic פיתא (pittā), from which it was received into Byzantine Greek (see above). Hypotheses also exist for Germanic[20] or Illyrian intermediaries.[21]

The word has been borrowed by the Turkish language as pide,[22] and appears in the Balkan languages as Bosnian-Serbian-Croatian pita, Romanian pită, Albanian pite, and Bulgarian pitka or pita; however, in the Serbo-Croatian languages of the countries comprising the former Yugoslavia, this culinary item is known as somun or lepinja while the word pita is used in a general sense meaning pie.

In Arabic, the phrase خبز البيتا (khabaz albayta, lit. "pita bread") is sometimes used; other names are simply خبز (khubz, "bread"), الخبز العربي (al-khubz al-ʿarabiyy, "Arab bread") or خبز الكماج (khabaz al-kimaj, "al-kimaj bread").[23] In Egypt, it is called عيش بلدي (ʽēš baladi) or simply عيش (ʽēš, "bread"),[24] although other subtypes of "bread" are common in Egypt, such as eish fino and eish merahrah.

In Greek, pita (πίτα) is understood by default to refer to the thicker, pocketless Greek pita, whereas the thinner khubz-style pita is referred to as aravikí pita (αραβική πίτα, lit. "Arabic pastry").

Preparation edit

 
Pita baking in Nazareth

Most pita breads are baked at high temperatures (450–475 °F (232–246 °C)), which turns the water in the dough into steam, thus causing the pita to puff up and form a pocket.[25] When removed from the oven, the layers of baked dough remain separated inside the deflated pita, which allows the bread to be opened to form a pocket. However, pita is sometimes baked without pockets and is called "pocket-less pita". Regardless of whether it is made at home or in a commercial bakery, pita is proofed for a very short time—only 15 minutes.[26]

Modern commercial pita bread is prepared on advanced automatic production lines, processing 100,000-pound (45,000 kg) 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—800–900 °F (427–482 °C)—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 10 °F (−12 °C).[25]

Culinary use edit

Pita can be used to scoop sauces or dips, such as hummus, or to wrap kebabs, gyros, 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,[27][28][29][30] and Ramazan pidesi. The first type of pide is used to wrap various styles of kebab, while the second is topped with cheese, ground meat, or other fresh or cured meats, and/or vegetables. Regional variations in the shape, baking technique, and toppings create distinctive styles for each region.

In Cyprus, pita is typically rounder, fluffier and baked on a cast-iron skillet. It is used for souvlakia, sheftalia, halloumi with lountza, and gyros. In Greece the word pita means "pastry" and is usually used for various cakes and pastries like spanakopita (spinach pie) and karydopita (walnut cake) unrelated to the English language "pita" flatbread.[31] Traditional breads in Greek cuisine are leavened loaves,[32] 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.

In Israel, Druze pita is very popular. [33] The Druze-style pita is filled with labneh (thick yoghurt) and topped with olive oil and za’atar.[34]

In Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia, the local style of pitta is known as lepinja, somun or pitica, and is the most common bread served with barbecued food like ćevapi, pljeskavica 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.[35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Marks, Gil (17 November 2010). Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. HMH. ISBN 9780544186316.
  2. ^ "Pita". Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 2011.
  3. ^ Uvezian, Sonia (2001). Recipes and Remembrances from an Eastern Mediterranean Kitchen: A Culinary Journey Through Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan. Siamanto Press. p. 313. ISBN 9780970971685 – via Google Books. The best-known bread of the region is khubz arabi (or, simply, khubz), a round, flat, slightly leavened loaf about one-fourth inch thick and with a pocket inside. It is made in three different sizes: large (eight or more inches in diameter), medium (six to eight inches), and small (about five inches). In America, where it has become very popular, this bread is known as pita. A pocketless version is also available. In some Arab communities khubz arabi is called kmaj (from the Persian kumaj), while in others, kmaj refers only to the pocketless type.
  4. ^ Stewart, Jean E.; Tamaki, Junko Alice (1992). Composition of foods: baked products : raw, processed, prepared. Vol. 8. United States Department of Agriculture, Nutrition Monitoring Division. p. 6. ISBN 9780160380440. Pita bread originated in the Middle East and is also known as Arabic, Syrian, and pocket bread.
  5. ^ Perry, Charles (21 August 2014). Davidson, Alan (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford University Press. pp. 629–630. ISBN 9780191040726 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ Wright, Clifford A. (2003). Little Foods of the Mediterranean: 500 Fabulous Recipes for Antipasti, Tapas, Hors D'Oeuvre, Meze, and More. Harvard Common Press. p. 61. ISBN 9781558322271.
  7. ^ Roden, Claudia (24 December 2008). The New Book of Middle Eastern Food. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 393–396. ISBN 9780307558565 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Serna-Saldivar, Sergio O. (2012). Cereal Grains: Laboratory Reference and Procedures Manual. CRC Press. p. 215. ISBN 9781439855652.
  9. ^ "World's oldest bread found at prehistoric site in Jordan", The Jerusalem Post, 2018, retrieved 16 July 2018
  10. ^ "Archaeologists find world's oldest bread and new evidence of sophisticated cooking dating back 14,000 years". The Independent. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
  11. ^ "Mastering the Art of Babylonian Cooking". The New York Times. Associated Press. 3 January 1988. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  12. ^ Bottéro, Jean (15 April 2004). The Oldest Cuisine in the World: Cooking in Mesopotamia. University of Chicago Press. pp. 47–49. ISBN 9780226067353 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ Helman, Anat (28 October 2015). Jews and Their Foodways. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190265434 – via Google Books.
  14. ^ a b c "pitta". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  15. ^ Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Λεξικό της κοινής Νεοελληνικής
  16. ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; Jones, Henry Stuart. A Greek–English Lexicon.
  17. ^ Javna, John. Uncle John's FACTASTIC Bathroom Reader, Printers Row, 2015
  18. ^ Babiniotis, Georgios (2005). Λεξικό της Νέας Ελληνικής Γλώσσας [Dictionary of Modern Greek] (in Greek). Lexicology Centre. p. 1413. ISBN 960-86190-1-7.
  19. ^ The connection between picta and πηκτή is not supported by the OED s.v. 'picture' nor by Buck, Carl Darling, A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo-European Languages (1949). 9.85 "paint", p. 629
  20. ^ Bracvini, G. Princi (1979). Archivio Glottologico Italiano. Vol. 64. pp. 42–89. Cited by the OED.
  21. ^ Kramer, J. (1990). Balkan-Archiv. Vol. 14–15. pp. 220–231. Cited by the OED.
  22. ^ Civitello, Linda (2007). Cuisine and culture: a history of food and people (Paperback ed.). Wiley. p. 98. ISBN 978-0471741725.
  23. ^ Cauvain, Stanley (2015). Technology of Breadmaking. New York: Springer. p. 232. ISBN 978-3-319-14687-4.
  24. ^ Bard, Kathryn A. (2005). Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt. London: Routledge. p. 178. ISBN 978-1-134-66525-9.
  25. ^ a b McNulty, Mary (2007). "Pita Bread". How products are made. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  26. ^ Tanis, David (21 February 2014). "Homemade Pita Bread". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  27. ^ Colon-Singh, Rose (12 June 2012). "Make Flatbread | Turkish Pide Recipe". Fine Dining Lovers. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
  28. ^ "Dayi'nin Yeri Turkish Restaurant, Cliffside Park, NJ". www.chowgofer.com. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
  29. ^ Elise, Lola (16 December 2009). "Pide Recipe". Tasty & Healthy Arbuz. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
  30. ^ Babs, Serena (17 January 2011). "Turkish Pizza aka Kiymali Pide". Tasty Kitchen. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
  31. ^ Ιφιγενεια Βιρβιδακη, Νενα Δημητριου, Νικολετα Μακρυωνιτου, Καλλιοπη Πατερα, "Tα καλύτερα ψωμιά των Αθηνών", Γαστρονόμος, Η Καθημερινή, 21 September 2016
  32. ^ Ιφιγενεια Βιρβιδακη, Νενα Δημητριου, Νικολετα Μακρυωνιτου, Καλλιοπη Πατερα, "Tα καλύτερα ψωμιά των Αθηνών", Γαστρονόμος, Η Καθημερινή, 21 September 2016 [1]
  33. ^ "A Taste of Druze Cuisine". Tabletmag. 20 November 2019.
  34. ^ Isalska, Anita (2018). Lonely Planet Israel & the Palestinian Territories. Lonely Planet. p. 5. ISBN 9781787019249.
  35. ^ Bara, Mariana (2014). "Constructing Armân/Vlach Ethnic Identity" (PDF). HyperCultura. 3 (1): 1–11.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of pita at Wiktionary

pita, other, uses, disambiguation, many, languages, word, pita, refers, flatbread, flaky, pastries, börek, them, confused, with, pihta, pitha, pitta, british, english, family, yeast, leavened, round, flatbreads, baked, from, wheat, flour, common, mediterranean. For other uses see Pita disambiguation In many languages the word pita refers not to flatbread but to flaky pastries see borek for them Not to be confused with Pihta or Pitha Pita ˈ p ɪ t e or US ˈ p iː t e 2 or pitta British English is a family of yeast leavened round flatbreads baked from wheat flour common in the Mediterranean Levant and neighboring areas It includes the widely known version with an interior pocket also known as Arabic bread Arabic خبز عربي khubz ʿArabi In the United Kingdom Greek bread is used for pocket versions such as the Greek pita and are used for barbecues as a souvlaki wrap 3 4 1 5 6 7 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 bread 8 PitaPita from GreeceAlternative namesPide KhubzTypeFlatbreadRegion or stateEastern Mediterranean Middle East 1 Main ingredientsWheat flour water yeast salt Media Pita Contents 1 History 2 Etymology 3 Preparation 4 Culinary use 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editPita has roots in the prehistoric flatbreads of the Near East 1 There is evidence from about 14 500 years ago during the Stone Age that the Natufian people in what is now Jordan made a kind of flatbread from wild cereal grains 9 10 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 11 and where pita like flatbreads cooked in a tinuru tannur or tandoor were a basic element of the diet and much the same as today s tandoor bread taboon bread 12 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 1 13 Etymology editThe first mention of the word in English cited in the Oxford English Dictionary was in 1936 14 The English word is borrowed from Modern Greek pita pita bread cake pie in turn from Byzantine Greek attested in 1108 14 possibly from Ancient Greek pitta pitta or pissa pissa both pitch resin for the gloss 15 16 or from pikth piktḗ fermented pastry which may have passed to Latin as picta cf pizza 17 18 19 In Levantine Arabic it evolved into fatteh since Old Arabic p evolved into f 14 Other hypotheses trace the word back to the Classical Hebrew word פת patt lit a morsel of bread 1 It is spelled like the Aramaic פיתא pitta from which it was received into Byzantine Greek see above Hypotheses also exist for Germanic 20 or Illyrian intermediaries 21 The word has been borrowed by the Turkish language as pide 22 and appears in the Balkan languages as Bosnian Serbian Croatian pita Romanian pită Albanian pite and Bulgarian pitka or pita however in the Serbo Croatian languages of the countries comprising the former Yugoslavia this culinary item is known as somun or lepinja while the word pita is used in a general sense meaning pie In Arabic the phrase خبز البيتا khabaz albayta lit pita bread is sometimes used other names are simply خبز khubz bread الخبز العربي al khubz al ʿarabiyy Arab bread or خبز الكماج khabaz al kimaj al kimaj bread 23 In Egypt it is called عيش بلدي ʽes baladi or simply عيش ʽes bread 24 although other subtypes of bread are common in Egypt such as eish fino and eish merahrah In Greek pita pita is understood by default to refer to the thicker pocketless Greek pita whereas the thinner khubz style pita is referred to as araviki pita arabikh pita lit Arabic pastry Preparation edit nbsp Pita baking in NazarethMost pita breads are baked at high temperatures 450 475 F 232 246 C which turns the water in the dough into steam thus causing the pita to puff up and form a pocket 25 When removed from the oven the layers of baked dough remain separated inside the deflated pita which allows the bread to be opened to form a pocket However pita is sometimes baked without pockets and is called pocket less pita Regardless of whether it is made at home or in a commercial bakery pita is proofed for a very short time only 15 minutes 26 Modern commercial pita bread is prepared on advanced automatic production lines processing 100 000 pound 45 000 kg 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 800 900 F 427 482 C 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 10 F 12 C 25 Culinary use editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pita can be used to scoop sauces or dips such as hummus or to wrap kebabs gyros 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 icli pide where the filling is placed on the often boat shaped dough before baking 27 28 29 30 and Ramazan pidesi The first type of pide is used to wrap various styles of kebab while the second is topped with cheese ground meat or other fresh or cured meats and or vegetables Regional variations in the shape baking technique and toppings create distinctive styles for each region In Cyprus pita is typically rounder fluffier and baked on a cast iron skillet It is used for souvlakia sheftalia halloumi with lountza and gyros In Greece the word pita means pastry and is usually used for various cakes and pastries like spanakopita spinach pie and karydopita walnut cake unrelated to the English language pita flatbread 31 Traditional breads in Greek cuisine are leavened loaves 32 such as the round karbeli karveli or the oblong frantzola frantzola 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 In Israel Druze pita is very popular 33 The Druze style pita is filled with labneh thick yoghurt and topped with olive oil and za atar 34 In Bosnia Croatia and Serbia the local style of pitta is known as lepinja somun or pitica and is the most common bread served with barbecued food like cevapi pljeskavica 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 borek 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 35 nbsp Pide baking in wood fired oven in Istanbul nbsp Hummus platter served with pide near Jaffa in Tel Aviv nbsp Karadeniz pidesi from Turkey topped with kasar cheese nbsp Palestinian breakfast with falafel hummus torshi and khubz bread nbsp Ramadan pide nbsp Shawarma in Jerusalem nbsp Gyro pide wrap nbsp Baked khubz on conveyor in Tell Rifaat Syria nbsp Kebab served over pide with pilav nbsp Bosnian cevapi served with local pitta variety called somun See also edit nbsp Food portalChapati an unleavened flatbread from the Indian subcontinent Flour tortilla a thin unleavened flatbread from Mexico Focaccia a flat oven baked bread from Italy Injera a sourdough risen flatbread from East Africa Khachapuri a breaded cheese dish from Georgia Markook an unleavened flatbread from the Middle East Matnakash a leavened bread from Armenia related to the Ramadan pita Naan a leavened oven baked flatbread from Central and South Asia Pită de Pecica a round bread from Romania Rghaif a pancake like bread from Northwest AfricaReferences edit a b c d e Marks Gil 17 November 2010 Encyclopedia of Jewish Food HMH ISBN 9780544186316 Pita Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press 2011 Uvezian Sonia 2001 Recipes and Remembrances from an Eastern Mediterranean Kitchen A Culinary Journey Through Syria Lebanon and Jordan Siamanto Press p 313 ISBN 9780970971685 via Google Books The best known bread of the region is khubz arabi or simply khubz a round flat slightly leavened loaf about one fourth inch thick and with a pocket inside It is made in three different sizes large eight or more inches in diameter medium six to eight inches and small about five inches In America where it has become very popular this bread is known as pita A pocketless version is also available In some Arab communities khubz arabi is called kmaj from the Persian kumaj while in others kmaj refers only to the pocketless type Stewart Jean E Tamaki Junko Alice 1992 Composition of foods baked products raw processed prepared Vol 8 United States Department of Agriculture Nutrition Monitoring Division p 6 ISBN 9780160380440 Pita bread originated in the Middle East and is also known as Arabic Syrian and pocket bread Perry Charles 21 August 2014 Davidson Alan ed The Oxford Companion to Food Oxford University Press pp 629 630 ISBN 9780191040726 via Google Books Wright Clifford A 2003 Little Foods of the Mediterranean 500 Fabulous Recipes for Antipasti Tapas Hors D Oeuvre Meze and More Harvard Common Press p 61 ISBN 9781558322271 Roden Claudia 24 December 2008 The New Book of Middle Eastern Food Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group pp 393 396 ISBN 9780307558565 via Google Books Serna Saldivar Sergio O 2012 Cereal Grains Laboratory Reference and Procedures Manual CRC Press p 215 ISBN 9781439855652 World s oldest bread found at prehistoric site in Jordan The Jerusalem Post 2018 retrieved 16 July 2018 Archaeologists find world s oldest bread and new evidence of sophisticated cooking dating back 14 000 years The Independent Retrieved 17 July 2018 Mastering the Art of Babylonian Cooking The New York Times Associated Press 3 January 1988 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 16 March 2019 Bottero Jean 15 April 2004 The Oldest Cuisine in the World Cooking in Mesopotamia University of Chicago Press pp 47 49 ISBN 9780226067353 via Google Books Helman Anat 28 October 2015 Jews and Their Foodways Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190265434 via Google Books a b c pitta Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Le3iko ths koinhs Neoellhnikhs Liddell Henry George Scott Robert Jones Henry Stuart A Greek English Lexicon Javna John Uncle John s FACTASTIC Bathroom Reader Printers Row 2015 Babiniotis Georgios 2005 Le3iko ths Neas Ellhnikhs Glwssas Dictionary of Modern Greek in Greek Lexicology Centre p 1413 ISBN 960 86190 1 7 The connection between picta and phkth is not supported by the OED s v picture nor by Buck Carl Darling A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo European Languages 1949 9 85 paint p 629 Bracvini G Princi 1979 Archivio Glottologico Italiano Vol 64 pp 42 89 Cited by the OED Kramer J 1990 Balkan Archiv Vol 14 15 pp 220 231 Cited by the OED Civitello Linda 2007 Cuisine and culture a history of food and people Paperback ed Wiley p 98 ISBN 978 0471741725 Cauvain Stanley 2015 Technology of Breadmaking New York Springer p 232 ISBN 978 3 319 14687 4 Bard Kathryn A 2005 Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt London Routledge p 178 ISBN 978 1 134 66525 9 a b McNulty Mary 2007 Pita Bread How products are made Retrieved 8 May 2018 Tanis David 21 February 2014 Homemade Pita Bread The New York Times Retrieved 8 May 2018 Colon Singh Rose 12 June 2012 Make Flatbread Turkish Pide Recipe Fine Dining Lovers Retrieved 10 December 2018 Dayi nin Yeri Turkish Restaurant Cliffside Park NJ www chowgofer com Retrieved 10 December 2018 Elise Lola 16 December 2009 Pide Recipe Tasty amp Healthy Arbuz Retrieved 10 December 2018 Babs Serena 17 January 2011 Turkish Pizza aka Kiymali Pide Tasty Kitchen Retrieved 10 December 2018 Ifigeneia Birbidakh Nena Dhmhtrioy Nikoleta Makrywnitoy Kallioph Patera Ta kalytera pswmia twn A8hnwn Gastronomos H Ka8hmerinh 21 September 2016 Ifigeneia Birbidakh Nena Dhmhtrioy Nikoleta Makrywnitoy Kallioph Patera Ta kalytera pswmia twn A8hnwn Gastronomos H Ka8hmerinh 21 September 2016 1 A Taste of Druze Cuisine Tabletmag 20 November 2019 Isalska Anita 2018 Lonely Planet Israel amp the Palestinian Territories Lonely Planet p 5 ISBN 9781787019249 Bara Mariana 2014 Constructing Arman Vlach Ethnic Identity PDF HyperCultura 3 1 1 11 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of pita at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pita amp oldid 1203821849, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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