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18 <h1>Olive Pita</h1>
19 <div class="contents">
20 <dl>
21 <dt>
22 <a href="#sec1">Ingredients</a>
23 </dt>
24 <dt>
25 <a href="#sec2">Directions</a>
26 </dt>
27 <dt>
28 <a href="#sec3">Notes</a>
29 </dt>
30 </dl>
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33
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35 <p>Everything is the same as the basic <a href="Pita.html">Pita</a> with the following additions.</p>
36
37 <h2><a name="sec1" id="sec1"></a>
38 Ingredients</h2>
39
40 <ul>
41 <li>~1/3 cup unpitted black olives (oil cured or fresh! Do not use
42 canned olives)</li>
43 </ul>
44
45
46 <h2><a name="sec2" id="sec2"></a>
47 Directions</h2>
48
49 <ol>
50 <li>Unpit and dice olives</li>
51 <li>Mix up the dry ingredients as in the <a href="Pita.html">Pita</a> recipe</li>
52 <li>Blend the olives in with the wet ingredients</li>
53 <li>Resume the normal <a href="Pita.html">Pita</a> recipe</li>
54 </ol>
55
56
57 <h2><a name="sec3" id="sec3"></a>
58 Notes</h2>
59
60 <p class="first">The first time I made this a few friends said there should be more
61 olives, and so the second time I made this I tried using a half cup of
62 olives instead of a quarter cup. This was a horrible mistake because
63 olives are very salty; more than a third of a cup is a bit much for my
64 taste.</p>
65
66 <p>I highly recommend using <a href="http://palestineoliveoil.com">Holy Land Olive Oil</a> in the bread (but cheap
67 stuff works to coat the rising bowl, naturally), or some other very
68 high quality olive oil. If you can buy it at a supermarket in the US
69 (even somewhere faux-fancy like Whole Foods) then it isn't high
70 quality. A proper olive oil imparts a delicious olive flavor
71 throughout the bread with the occasional chunk of olive enhancing the
72 flavor. I made a batch with grocery-store-expensive olive oil once and
73 it was very bland comparatively. It is amazing how two tablespoons
74 (ostensibly thrown in to control the yeast) of properly made olive oil
75 can impart such a nice flavor.</p>
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106 <p class="cke-timestamp">Last Modified:
107 January 21, 2013</p>
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