Turkish Pide – Boat-Shaped Flatbread with Minced Lamb
Golden boat-shaped flatbread filled with spiced lamb, peppers and egg — Turkey's answer to pizza.
About This Recipe
Pide is Turkey's iconic boat-shaped flatbread, baked in wood-fired stone ovens in dedicated pide restaurants called 'pideci.' The dough is chewy and slightly charred, formed into an elongated oval and folded at the ends to create a boat that contains the filling as it bakes. The most popular filling is kıymalı pide — spiced minced meat with peppers and tomatoes — often finished with an egg cracked on top in the last minutes of baking. The dough is enriched slightly with egg and yogurt, giving it a tender interior with a blistered, slightly crispy base. The filling is kept moist with fresh tomatoes and peppers, which release their juices into the lamb during baking. A perfectly made pide has a crispy bottom, a soft, airy edge, and a juicy, flavourful filling that stays in place rather than spilling out. Pide is best eaten immediately from the oven, cut into sections with scissors and served with fresh salad, pickled chillies, and ayran. It makes a spectacular centrepiece for a dinner party and is far simpler to make at home than it looks.
Ingredients
Serves 4
- 400 gstrong bread flour
- 7 ginstant yeast
- 1 tspsugar
- 1 tspsalt
- 1egg
- 2 tbspyogurt
- 200 mlwarm water
- 300 gminced lamb or beef
- 1onion(finely diced)
- 2green peppers(finely diced)
- 2tomatoes(finely diced)
- 2 tbsptomato paste
- 1 tsppaprika
- 4eggs(for topping)
Instructions
- 1
Make the dough
Combine flour, yeast, sugar and salt. Mix in egg, yogurt and warm water to form a soft dough. Knead 10 minutes. Cover and rise 45 minutes until doubled.
- 2
Prepare the filling
Mix together mince, onion, peppers, tomatoes, tomato paste, paprika, salt and pepper. Don't cook it — it cooks in the oven.
- 3
Shape the pide
Divide dough into 4. On a floured surface, roll each piece into an oval about 30cm long and 15cm wide. Transfer to oiled baking trays.
Keep the dough thin — 5mm. It puffs considerably in the oven.
- 4
Fill and fold
Spread filling along the centre, leaving a 2cm border. Fold the long edges up and over the filling slightly, pinching the ends together to form a boat shape.
- 5
Bake
Bake at 230°C for 12 minutes. Remove, crack an egg onto each pide, return to oven for 3–4 minutes until egg white is just set.
Pro Tips
- →
Use a very hot oven — the bottom of the pide needs to crisp up quickly.
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Don't overfill — a thin layer of filling ensures it cooks through without making the base soggy.
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Brush the dough edges with butter as soon as the pide comes out of the oven.
Variations
- •
Kaşarlı pide: replace meat with Turkish yellow cheese (kaşar) for a rich vegetarian version.
- •
Ispanaklı pide: spinach, egg and white cheese filling.
Storage
Best eaten immediately. Reheat leftovers in a hot oven at 200°C for 5 minutes.
History & Origin
Pide has been baked in Anatolia for centuries, predating the Ottoman Empire. It is closely associated with Ramadan, when special Ramazan pidesi (plain, sesame-topped flatbread) is baked and given out at bakeries. The filled boat-shaped pide became a staple of Turkish street food culture, with the Black Sea city of Trabzon famous for its distinctive style.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between pide and lahmacun?
Pide has a thicker, chewier dough shaped like a boat with sides that hold the filling in place. Lahmacun is paper-thin, cracker-crisp, and rolled to eat. Pide has more bread-like qualities; lahmacun is more like a very thin flatbread cracker with meat.
Nutrition Facts
Per serving (400g / 14.1 oz) · 4 servings total
Time Summary
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