There are breads you bake because something is needed alongside a meal. And then there are breads like this Vegan Turkish Bread — the kind that comes out of the oven with a deeply golden, sesame-scattered crust, a soft and pillowy interior that tears into long, satisfying strands, and a warmth and aroma so inviting that people are already reaching for a piece before it has properly cooled. This is that bread. The one that makes any meal feel more generous and more complete. The one that disappears faster than anything else on the table.
Pide is the everyday flatbread of Turkey, found in every bakery and home kitchen across the country, characterized by its oval shape, slightly puffy, pillowy texture, and distinctive sesame seed topping. Unlike the thin, crispy flatbreads of other bread traditions, pide has a genuine, tender crumb that absorbs sauces beautifully and tears with the satisfying resistance of properly developed gluten. It is the bread that accompanies meze spreads, soups, and stews throughout Turkish cuisine, and it is one of the most rewarding and impressive breads a home baker can make.
What makes this pide so outstanding is its relative simplicity — a straightforward yeasted dough enriched with just a touch of olive oil, shaped into the traditional oval, brushed with a plant milk glaze and scattered with sesame seeds, and baked in a very hot oven that produces the characteristic golden crust and soft interior simultaneously.
This recipe is 100% vegan, ready in about 2 hours including rising time, and absolutely magnificent served warm and fresh, torn by hand and used to scoop hummus, dip into soup, or simply eaten with a drizzle of good olive oil.
Recipe Information
| Prep Time | Rise Time | Cook Time | Total Time | Servings | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 mins | 75 mins | 15 mins | 110 mins | 8 | ~220 kcal |
Ingredients
For the Dough
- 3 cups (360g) bread flour or all-purpose flour
- 2¼ tsp (7g) active dry yeast
- 1 tsp sugar
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 cup (240ml) warm water (110°F / 43°C)
- 2 tbsp olive oil
For the Topping
- 3 tbsp plant milk mixed with 1 tsp maple syrup (for brushing)
- 3 tbsp sesame seeds
- 1 tbsp nigella seeds (optional but traditional and beautiful)
Instructions
- Activate the yeast. Combine the warm water, sugar, and yeast in a small bowl. Stir gently and let sit for 5–10 minutes until the surface is foamy and fragrant. If no foam develops the yeast is inactive — start again with fresh yeast.
- Make the dough. In a large bowl combine the flour and salt. Add the activated yeast mixture and olive oil. Mix until a shaggy dough forms, then turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 8–10 minutes until smooth, elastic, and slightly tacky. The dough should spring back slowly when poked.
- First rise. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, cover with a damp towel or plastic wrap, and leave in a warm place for 60–75 minutes until doubled in size.
- Shape the pide. Punch down the risen dough and divide into 2 equal pieces for larger loaves or 4 pieces for individual portions. On a lightly floured surface, shape each piece into an oval approximately 25cm long and 12cm wide, about 1.5cm thick. Place on parchment-lined baking sheets.
- Second rise. Cover loosely and let rest for 15–20 minutes until slightly puffed.
- Score and top. Using your fingertips, press a diamond or crosshatch pattern gently into the surface of each oval — this is the traditional pide pattern and helps the bread bake evenly. Brush generously with the plant milk and maple syrup glaze, then scatter sesame seeds and nigella seeds if using evenly over the surface.
- Bake in a hot oven. Preheat the oven to 450°F (230°C) — the very high temperature is essential for the characteristic golden crust and soft interior. Bake for 12–15 minutes until deeply golden on top with a hollow sound when tapped on the bottom.
- Cool briefly and serve. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool for 5 minutes before serving. Pide is at its best within 30 minutes of baking, while the crust is still slightly crisp and the interior is warm and pillowy.
Pro Tips
- Use bread flour if available for the most developed gluten structure and chewiest interior, though all-purpose flour also produces excellent results.
- Do not skip the second rise after shaping — even 15 minutes makes a meaningful difference to the final lightness and texture.
- Bake at the highest temperature your oven allows for the most authentic result — pide is traditionally baked in a wood-fired oven at very high heat.
- Press the diamond pattern gently but firmly enough that it holds during baking rather than disappearing as the dough puffs.
- Brush generously with the glaze immediately before baking for the most deeply golden, shiny crust.
The Story of Turkish Pide
Pide is one of the oldest and most beloved breads in Turkish culinary culture, with a history stretching back centuries through the bread traditions of Anatolia and the wider Middle East. The word pide itself is related to the broader family of flatbreads found throughout the Mediterranean and Middle East — sharing linguistic and culinary roots with the Greek pitta and the Arabic khubz.
In Turkey, pide is not a special-occasion bread but an everyday staple, baked fresh multiple times daily in neighborhood bakeries (fırın) and eaten alongside virtually every meal. The characteristic oval shape, scored surface, and sesame topping are recognized immediately across Turkey as the defining features of this bread, as distinct and culturally specific as a baguette is to France or a ciabatta to Italy.
During Ramadan, pide production intensifies dramatically — Turkish bakeries produce extraordinary volumes of Ramazan pidesi, a slightly thicker, more richly topped version of the everyday bread that is baked specifically for the Iftar meal that breaks the daily fast. Long queues form outside bakeries in the hour before Iftar, making the scent of fresh pide one of the most evocative and culturally significant aromas of the Ramadan period in Turkey.
This vegan version is entirely faithful to the original in technique and character — the only change from a traditional Turkish pide recipe is the replacement of the egg or egg wash typically brushed over the surface with the plant milk and maple syrup glaze, which produces an identical golden, glossy crust.
Flavor Variations
- Herb Pide: Add 1 teaspoon of dried oregano and thyme to the dough for a fragrant, herbed version.
- Zaatar Pide: Replace the sesame seeds with a generous scattering of zaatar for a Middle Eastern-inspired version with a beautiful herby, lemony topping.
- Garlic Pide: Brush the baked bread immediately with garlic-infused olive oil for a version that is particularly spectacular alongside soups and stews.
Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)
| Calories | Protein | Carbs | Fiber | Fat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ~220 kcal | 6g | 38g | 2g | 5g |
Storage
- Room temperature: Store in an airtight bag or wrapped in a clean towel for up to 2 days. Warm briefly in a low oven or toaster before serving to restore the fresh-baked texture.
- Freezer: Freeze baked pide, well wrapped, for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature and warm in the oven before serving.
- Dough: The risen dough can be refrigerated after the first rise for up to 24 hours — shape, second rise, and bake fresh the next day for the best result.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make pide without bread flour?
Yes — all-purpose flour produces excellent pide with a slightly softer, less chewy crumb than bread flour. Both are entirely appropriate and produce beautiful results.
Why is my pide dense rather than light and pillowy?
Dense pide is almost always caused by insufficient kneading, an incomplete first rise, or yeast that did not activate properly. Knead for the full 8–10 minutes, ensure the dough has genuinely doubled in size during the first rise, and always check your yeast is active before beginning.
Can I make smaller individual pide?
Yes — divide the dough into 4 pieces instead of 2 for individual-sized pide that bake in 10–12 minutes. These are particularly convenient for serving as individual portions alongside soup or meze.
Is pide the same as pizza dough?
The doughs are similar in their basic composition but pide dough typically has less oil and is baked at a higher temperature, producing a lighter, crispier crust than most pizza doughs. Pide is also served as a bread rather than a base for toppings, though a related preparation called kiymali pide does feature a spiced meat (or in vegan versions, lentil or mushroom) filling.
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