FLATBREAD
(Redirected from Unleavened bread)

A 'flatbread' is a simple bread made from flattened dough. Many flatbreads are unleavened—made without yeast or sourdough culture. They can range from a less than one millimeter to a few centimeters thick.
Flatbread was already known in Ancient Egypt and Sumer.
The term ''unleavened breads'' can also refer to breads which are not prepared with leavening agents. These flatbreads holds special religious significance to adherents of Judaism and Christianity. Jews consume unleavened breads such as Matzo during Passover. They are also used in the Christan liturgy when Christians perform the Eucharist.
In 2000 Edward de Bono advised a U.K Foreign Office committee that the Arab-Israeli conflict might be due, in part, to low levels of zinc found in people who eat unleavened bread, a known side-effect of which is aggression. He suggested shipping out jars of Marmite to compensate. [1]
★ Aish Mehahra (Egypt)
★ Barbari bread (Persian)
★ Bazlama (Turkey)
★ Bhakri (India)
★ Bhatura (India)
★ Bing (China)
★ Chapati (India)
★ Crisp bread (Nordic)
★ Flammkuchen (Germany)
★ Flatbrød (Norway)
★ Focaccia (Italy)
★ Green onion pancake (China)
★ Injera (Ethiopia),(Eritrea)
★ Khanom buang (Thailand)
★ Knäckebröd (Sweden)
★ Laobing (China)
★ Lavash (Eastern Mediterranean)
★ Laxoox (Somaliland)
★ Lefse (Nordic)
★ Luchi (East India and Bangladesh)
★ Malooga (Yemeni)
★ Matzo (Jewish)
★ Naan (Central and South Asia)
★ Ngome (Mali)
★ Pancake (Canada and United States)
★ Papadum (India, Sri Lanka)
★ Paratha (India, Sri Lanka)
★ Piadina (Italy)
★ Pide (Turkey)
★ Pita (Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East)
★ Pizza is also based on flatbread.
★ Puri (India)
★ Roti (Central and South Asia)
★ Sanchuisanda (the Qiang people of China) -- made of wheat flour and baked in ashes at the side of an open wood fire. The finished loaf is covered in ashes which are blown and patted off. The name literally means "three blows, three hits" and refers to this post-cooking cleaning.
★ Sangak (Persian)
★ Taftoon Bread (Persian)
★ Tortilla (Mexico)
★ Tunnbröd (Sweden)
★ Yufka (Turkey)
1. Lloyd, J & Mitchinson, J: "The Book of General Ignorance". Faber & Faber, 2006.
★ Sanchuisanda is described in "Peoples of China's Far Provinces", by Wong How-Man, ''National Geographic'', March 1984.
Making Tortillas
A 'flatbread' is a simple bread made from flattened dough. Many flatbreads are unleavened—made without yeast or sourdough culture. They can range from a less than one millimeter to a few centimeters thick.
Flatbread was already known in Ancient Egypt and Sumer.
| Contents |
| Religious significance |
| Examples |
| References |
Religious significance
The term ''unleavened breads'' can also refer to breads which are not prepared with leavening agents. These flatbreads holds special religious significance to adherents of Judaism and Christianity. Jews consume unleavened breads such as Matzo during Passover. They are also used in the Christan liturgy when Christians perform the Eucharist.
In 2000 Edward de Bono advised a U.K Foreign Office committee that the Arab-Israeli conflict might be due, in part, to low levels of zinc found in people who eat unleavened bread, a known side-effect of which is aggression. He suggested shipping out jars of Marmite to compensate. [1]
Examples
★ Aish Mehahra (Egypt)
★ Barbari bread (Persian)
★ Bazlama (Turkey)
★ Bhakri (India)
★ Bhatura (India)
★ Bing (China)
★ Chapati (India)
★ Crisp bread (Nordic)
★ Flammkuchen (Germany)
★ Flatbrød (Norway)
★ Focaccia (Italy)
★ Green onion pancake (China)
★ Injera (Ethiopia),(Eritrea)
★ Khanom buang (Thailand)
★ Knäckebröd (Sweden)
★ Laobing (China)
★ Lavash (Eastern Mediterranean)
★ Laxoox (Somaliland)
★ Lefse (Nordic)
★ Luchi (East India and Bangladesh)
★ Malooga (Yemeni)
★ Matzo (Jewish)
★ Naan (Central and South Asia)
★ Ngome (Mali)
★ Pancake (Canada and United States)
★ Papadum (India, Sri Lanka)
★ Paratha (India, Sri Lanka)
★ Piadina (Italy)
★ Pide (Turkey)
★ Pita (Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East)
★ Pizza is also based on flatbread.
★ Puri (India)
★ Roti (Central and South Asia)
★ Sanchuisanda (the Qiang people of China) -- made of wheat flour and baked in ashes at the side of an open wood fire. The finished loaf is covered in ashes which are blown and patted off. The name literally means "three blows, three hits" and refers to this post-cooking cleaning.
★ Sangak (Persian)
★ Taftoon Bread (Persian)
★ Tortilla (Mexico)
★ Tunnbröd (Sweden)
★ Yufka (Turkey)
References
1. Lloyd, J & Mitchinson, J: "The Book of General Ignorance". Faber & Faber, 2006.
★ Sanchuisanda is described in "Peoples of China's Far Provinces", by Wong How-Man, ''National Geographic'', March 1984.
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