It is amazing how one can be a foodie (for lack of a better term) and still find “new” food items to dream about. Like the traditional bread from Uzbekistan, a fascinating country north of Afghanistan. A couple of months ago I stumbled on this blog post and could not stop thinking about the beauty of those flat breads. The dough can be very simple, although I found countless recipe variations for them. From type of flour to amount of yeast, duration of fermentation, type of fat added, it’s hard to find a common denominator. But the basic characteristic is the stamping of beautiful images on the dough right before baking. I found a beautiful bread stamp for sale at Etsy, and a few weeks later it joined our kitchen. I could not wait to try it!
LEPYOSHKA – UZBEK FLATBREAD
(adapted from this video)
1 + 1/2 cups water, at room temperature
1 cup yogurt, full-fat
1 tablespoon instant yeast
1 teaspoon sugar
2 cups whole-wheat flour (I needed to add quite a bit more)
1 tsp salt
2 tablespoons olive oil
Mix all ingredients in the order listed in a bowl. Knead by hand for 10 minutes, or if using a KitchenAid type mixer, knead at medium speed for 6 minutes. If the dough seems too slack, add more flour at this point. It should feel sticky, but hold together nicely.
Transfer dough to a clean bowl lightly brushed with oil. Cover and allow it to ferment at room temperature for 2 hours.
Divide the dough in 4 portions, shape each as a small ball. Cover and leave at room temperature for 5 minutes.
Flatten each ball into a round. Press the center, forming a thicker layer of dough all around the perimeter. Use a spoon and a bread stamp to decorate the surface.
Bake in a 375 F oven inside a Dutch oven for about 20 minutes. Remove the cover after 10 minutes. If you have a large enough Dutch oven, you can bake two at a time. If baking one at a time, leave the balls covered and make the decorations right before baking.
ENJOY!
to print the recipe, click here
Comments: The recipe I am sharing is in fact my second attempt at making Uzbek flat breads. For my first adventure, I had not found a detailed recipe, it was more a vague set of instructions, so I made my own formula and used the fermentation time suggested. It contained quite a bit of yeast, and the proof fermentation was short, only 40 minutes. The result was a bread that rose so much during baking that the pattern of the stamp was lost. Below you see before and after pictures.
I was a bit disappointed, even though the bread tasted pretty good. I wanted my pattern to show. I asked for help in a bread Facebook page, and got great advice. Including the link to that youtube video with the recipe I used. Worked like a charm! For my next time I intend to use 75% white bread flour and 25% whole wheat or spelt. I think it would make a nice texture, and probably need a little less flour during kneading.
As to the decoration, you can do pretty much whatever you feel like it. I opted for the technique in the video. It uses a spoon all around the edge, then the stamp goes in the center. Next, you pinch the dough with two fingers around the stamp. But you can do several rounds of stamps in the center instead, leave the dough plain all around. I imagine that each family has their own way to decorate their bread.
My design was approved by all members of our family…
The bread was delicious with hummus, with goat cheese, and black olive tapenade. Sliced like a pita, it was fantastic to deliver fresh tomatoes juicy with a drizzle of olive oil and oregano. Since learning about Uzbek flat bread, also called Lepyoshka, I’ve been fascinated by that country. You can find some nice pictures of Uzbekistan in this link.
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I love to find food like this that I’ve never eaten or even seen before. You are one lucky woman to have tripped across this. I want to make it. I’ll need a bread stamp. I only have one for rolls that I found through Celia.
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Me too… I get absolutely mesmerized by “new” foods that seem so appealing!
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Love it, love it, love it. I want that bread stamp!!!!
I definitely want to give these a go 😊😊😊😊
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I am sure you will be able to track some bread stamps down in London – they have anything! I can imagine the beauties you will bake! Tough part was deciding which stamp to get, there are so many patterns available!
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Ooh, that sounds dangerous….
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Just looking on etsy…. they’re so pretty!
What diameter is yours?
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exactly 3 inches
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Thanks for this video! I’ve tried a few times over the years with the various vague and different recipes online. I even have full fat yogurt on hand, bought accidentally in place of low fat. I’ll report back on results.
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awesome! now, do try a formula with some white bread in it – I truly believe it will be even better – I like whole wheat bread, but felt that using exclusively WWF in the dough made it a bit too heavy… I want to do this again, maybe this weekend, and will try 75% white…
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Beautiful. I was so intrigued about the designs! It’s a work of art.
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such a simple idea, but it works wonders!
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Such a pretty bread. The stamp (like ma’amoul moulds) is on my ‘when I win the lottery’ wish list. 🙂
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Pingback: Sourdough Uzbek flatbreads… – The home of great sourdough
The recipe from video is actuall 5 cups flour, 3 of which is white.
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but they look fantastic!
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Yes, I adapted, did not use it exactly like described in the video
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For those interested to know, the bread stamp the author used comes from this webshop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/artsyuzbek
You can also find other kinds of bread stamps here:
https://www.etsy.com/shop/artsystamp
https://www.etsy.com/shop/artsyuzbekplus
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