Lamb and Eggplant Pide
Published Sept. 2, 2020

- Total Time
- 1¼ hours, plus rising
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ¾cup/180 milliliters warm water
- 1tablespoon granulated sugar
- 1½teaspoons active dry yeast
- 2¼cups/290 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling
- 1½teaspoons kosher salt
- 2tablespoons olive oil
- 3tablespoons olive oil
- 1small onion, diced
- 1small eggplant (8 ounces/225 grams), diced
- Kosher salt
- 2tablespoons tomato paste
- ½teaspoon ground cumin
- ½teaspoon black pepper
- ¼teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ¼teaspoon red-pepper flakes
- ⅛teaspoon ground allspice
- ½pound/225 grams ground lamb
- 2garlic cloves, minced
- ½cup/15 grams fresh mint, finely chopped
- 1tablespoon olive oil, for brushing the pans and the pides
- ½cup/120 milliliters plain full-fat yogurt
- 1large egg
- Kosher salt and black pepper
For the Dough
For the Filling
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the dough: In the bowl of stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment (or in a large bowl with a wooden spoon) combine the water and sugar. Sprinkle the yeast on top and let stand 5 minutes until foamy. With the mixer on low speed, add the flour, salt and olive oil and mix until combined. Increase the speed to medium, and mix until the dough comes together as a smooth ball. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let stand in a warm place until doubled in size, about 1 hour.
- Step 2
While the dough is rising, make the filling: Heat the olive oil in a large (12-inch) skillet over medium. Add the onion and eggplant and several pinches of salt, and cook, stirring frequently, until softened and beginning to brown, 8 to 10 minutes. Stir in the tomato paste, cumin, black pepper, cinnamon, red-pepper flakes and allspice and cook for 1 minute. Add the lamb, increase the heat to high and cook, breaking up the chunks of meat with a wooden spoon, until the meat is barely pink, 5 to 6 minutes. Stir in the garlic and cook 1 minute more, stirring constantly (or removing from the heat as necessary) to keep the garlic from scorching. Let cool slightly, then stir in the mint. Season to taste with more salt.
- Step 3
Arrange the racks in the top and bottom third of the oven, and heat oven to 400 degrees. Lightly grease 2 rimmed baking sheets. In a small bowl, whisk together the yogurt and egg, and season with salt and pepper. Set aside. Transfer the dough to a lightly floured work surface and divide into 12 pieces, each about 1½ ounces/45 grams. With a floured rolling pin, roll each piece of dough into an even oval measuring about 6-by-4 inches/15-by-10 centimeters. Working with one piece of dough at a time, spoon a scant tablespoon of the yogurt mixture into the center of the oval, then use the back of the spoon to spread it in a thin layer, leaving a ½-inch border. Spoon some of the lamb mixture on top of the yogurt and spread in an even layer. Fold the edges of the dough up and pinch the ends so the pide resembles a canoe. With a large spatula (or the bottom of a removable bottom tart pan) transfer the pide to the prepared baking sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough, yogurt and lamb.
- Step 4
Brush each pide with some of the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil. Bake until the dough is deep brown, 18 to 23 minutes, rotating the pans and switching oven racks halfway through baking. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool. Eat warm or at room temperature.
Private Notes
Comments
I’ve made this 3 times now, twice as the small boats and once as a large pizza. Peeling the eggplant worked better for us and dicing it as the recipe suggests rather than chopping. The flavors are excellent together. I added a little water and more oil second and third times as the lamb mixture was too dry.
Covid friendly for back porch six-footers where you need to eat something substantial with your vinho verde but don't want to get too close by sitting at a table. I omitted the cinnamon and allspice. Substituted parsley for the mint. Made a yogurt (raita type) sauce for topping. Excellent! For kid friendly version- half lamb/half ground pork and left out the eggplant. Those kids don't know what they're missing!
If you care, it's pronounced PEA-deh, not pea-DAY. Emphasis on first syllable and very soft finish to the second.
Very tasty! Cooked until the eggplant broke down and melded with the lamb, which was very good, though we thought it was a bit dry. Next time we'll add more eggplant. Might try fresh tomatoes in the lamb/eggplant mixture along with the tomato paste as well. Also added crumbled fresh feta on top after baking and more fresh mint on top. Not sure the egg and yogurt mixture is essential (doesn't quite come through the rich flavors of the filling, which is what prompted us to add feta on top).
These were a hit with my family. I made 6 large ones instead of 12 small ones.
If you care, it's pronounced PEA-deh, not pea-DAY. Emphasis on first syllable and very soft finish to the second.
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