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Homemade Pita Bread

Once you start making this homemade pita bread recipe, you won't be able to stop! Soft, puffy, and flavorful, it beats any kind from the grocery store.

baking — Jump to recipe

Pita bread

This homemade pita bread recipe comes from my friend Molly Yeh. It’s been on my list to try for years, but for one reason or another, I never made it until this spring. When I finally did, what Jack and I thought would be a fun, one-time cooking project turned into a full-on pita bread obsession. We started putting extra yogurt on the grocery list just so we could make it!

If you’re thinking, “Wait. Yogurt? In pita bread?”, you’re not crazy. It’s not a typical pita bread recipe ingredient.

But in my opinion, it’s what makes this pita bread so exceptional. It’s not only thicker, softer, and puffier than any other homemade or store-bought pita I’ve tried, but also it has a tangy, sourdough-like flavor. It’s just as delicious plain as it is with a filling or a dip, and as Molly writes, it’d make a pretty great sleeping bag too. If your experience is anything like ours, once you start making it, you won’t be able to stop.

Ball of dough

How to Make Pita Bread

This pita bread recipe is easy to make! Here’s how it goes:

First, make the pita dough. Activate the yeast by mixing it with warm water and a teaspoon of sugar. When the yeast mixture foams, add it to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, and mix it with the flour, salt, remaining sugar, oil, and yogurt. Knead the dough, either with the stand mixer on medium speed or by hand, until it’s soft and slightly sticky, 7 to 10 minutes.

Pita bread recipe dough

Once you’ve kneaded the dough, let it rise. Transfer it to an oiled bowl and cover it with a kitchen towel or plastic wrap. Set it aside for about 2 hours, or until the dough has doubled in size.

Balls of dough on baking sheets

Then, divide the dough into balls. This recipe makes 12 small flatbreads, so you’ll split it up into 12 equal parts. Cover the balls, and let the dough rest for 20 more minutes.

How to make pita bread

Next, roll out the pita bread! Use a rolling pin to roll the dough balls into 1/4 to 1/2-inch thick circles on a lightly floured surface. Keep any dough you’re not working with covered as you roll out the pita.

Dough on a baking sheet

Once you’ve rolled out all the dough, bake! Arrange the dough circles on two parchment-lined baking sheets. Bake one sheet at a time at 500°F until the pita bread is puffy and golden brown on top. That’s it! Transfer the freshly baked pita to a wire rack to cool, and enjoy.

Note: When we make this pita bread recipe, there are always a few pita that don’t puff up to form pockets. That’s ok! They’re still great for dipping or enjoying as flatbreads.

Pita bread in oven

Pita Bread Recipe Tips

  • Weigh your flour. Because this recipe uses a large amount of flour, you should weigh it if you can. This way, you’ll know exactly how much flour you’re using. Cup measurements are much less precise, as they can vary based on a variety of factors (your specific measuring cups, how tightly you pack your flour, etc.). If you don’t have a kitchen scale, check out this post for my best tips on measuring flour with measuring cups.
  • Bake one sheet at a time. Because temperatures vary throughout an oven, bake one sheet at a time for the most even cooking. You don’t want the pita bread on the bottom rack to burn before the top rack starts to brown! And with only one baking sheet in the oven, you can position a rack in the center to give the pita space to puff up.
  • Rotate the pan. Jack and I start checking our pita bread a few minutes before we think it’ll be ready, at around the 5 minute mark. At that point, if one side of the pan is more puffy or golden than the other, we rotate it and bake for a few more minutes so that both sides can cook evenly.
  • Freeze some for later. Whenever we make this recipe, we almost always freeze half the batch to have on hand for snacking later on. If you plan to store and reheat the pita bread, pull it out of the oven just before it starts to brown. Molly recommends thawing or reheating it in the toaster, where it’ll brown up without getting too crisp or burnt.

Homemade pita bread

Pita Bread Serving Suggestions

This pita bread is so soft, fluffy, and flavorful that we honestly love to eat it plain! However, it’s also fantastic with all sorts of fillings, spreads, and dips. Here are a few ideas to get you started:

  • Fill it with falafel, pickled red onions, tahini sauce, and fresh herbs.
  • Stuff it with egg salad, vegan egg salad, or my chickpea salad sandwich filling.
  • Toast it, slice it into wedges, and add it to a crudité platter with white bean dip and fresh veggies.
  • Load it up with my easy chickpea shawarma.
  • Use it to scoop up saucy shakshuka or baked feta.
  • Pile it with grilled veggies and tzatziki sauce for a light summer meal.
  • Top it with peanut butter, sliced banana or apple, and a drizzle of honey.
  • Or dip it into hummus, baba ganoush, or muhammara for a healthy snack!

How do you like to eat your homemade pita? Let me know in the comments!

Pita bread recipe

More Favorite Bread Recipes

If you love this homemade pita bread recipe, try making one of these recipes next:

  • Homemade Bagels
  • No Knead Bread
  • Homemade Hamburger Buns
  • Focaccia
  • Homemade Pizza Dough

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Homemade Pita Bread

rate this recipe:
4.73 from 148 votes
Prep Time: 20 minutes mins
Cook Time: 5 minutes mins
Rising Time: 2 hours hrs 20 minutes mins
Serves 12
Save Recipe Print Recipe
This homemade pita bread is so much better than store bought! Soft, puffy, and flavorful, it's just as delicious plain as it is with a topping or dip. The recipe is from the Short Stack edition Yogurt by Molly Yeh.

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup warm water
  • 1 package active dry yeast, 2¼ teaspoons
  • 1 teaspoon plus 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 3¾ cups bread flour, 469 grams, plus more for dusting
  • 1½ teaspoons sea salt
  • 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for the bowl
  • ¾ cup whole-milk Greek yogurt
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Instructions

  • In a medium bowl, combine the water, yeast, and 1 teaspoon of sugar. Let the mixture sit until it’s foamy on top, about 5 minutes.
  • In a large mixing bowl or stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, combine the flour, salt, and remaining tablespoon sugar. Add the yeast mixture, oil, and yogurt, and mix to combine. Knead the dough, either in the stand mixer on medium speed or by hand on a clean work surface, adding more flour if needed, until it’s soft and slightly sticky, 7 to 10 minutes. Transfer the dough to an oiled bowl, cover with a towel or plastic wrap, and let rise until it’s doubled in size, about 2 hours.
  • Preheat the oven to 500°F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
  • Turn the dough out onto a clean work surface and divide it into 12 equal balls. Cover and let rise an additional 20 minutes.
  • Roll the balls out into circles that are ¼ to ½-inch thick. Place them onto the baking sheets an inch apart, then bake, one sheet at a time, until they’re puffy and lightly browned on top. Begin checking at 5 minutes. We bake them for about 8 minutes, rotating the pan after the 5 minute mark if one side of the sheet is puffing up more than the other. Transfer the pitas to a wire rack to cool.

Notes

Note: These freeze really well. Molly recommends pulling them out of the oven just before they’re brown if you plan to store and reheat them. To thaw, pop them in the toaster - they’ll brown up a bit as they toast.
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289 comments

Previous Comments
4.73 from 148 votes (60 ratings without comment)

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Rate this recipe (after making it)




  1. Connie Waller
    01.22.2026

    Would non-dairy yogurt work? I can’t have dairy products. This certainly looks amazing & would love to try it. Thanks so much

    Reply ↓
  2. Fatima
    01.07.2026

    5 stars
    It all of mine fully puffed up but all of them tasted delicious! I was even able to stuff mine with hummus and spinach as if it was a pita pocket!

    Reply ↓
    • Jeanine Donofrio
      01.09.2026

      I’m glad your pita worked out well!

      Reply ↓
  3. Shweta Singh
    01.03.2026

    1 star
    Incorrect ratio of flour to water..

    Reply ↓
    • c
      01.14.2026

      can I freeze the dough balls to bake later?

      Reply ↓
      • Jeanine Donofrio
        01.15.2026

        Hi Chrissy, we haven’t tried that, I’m not sure.

        Reply ↓
        • Angie
          01.24.2026

          5 stars
          Hi. I have. Just thaw and cook as normal. I have done this with flour tortilla dough too.

          Reply ↓
  4. Catalina
    01.02.2026

    Can I use 1/4 cup of the flour as wheat flour and use honey instead of sugar?

    Thank you,
    Lina

    Reply ↓
    • Jeanine Donofrio
      01.03.2026

      Hi Catalina, I think these modifications should be fine.

      Reply ↓
  5. sarah spinette
    01.01.2026

    1 star
    None of mine puffed up at all ! I followed the recipe as writen, what went wrong?

    Reply ↓
  6. Bobbett
    12.31.2025

    I adjusted the pita recipe down to six pitas instead of 12 but it did not change the grams of flour. I can easily divide the flour grams in half but I want to confirm that the 469 g of flour you have listed are for 12 , and I should use half of that weight for six pitas. Please let me know.

    Reply ↓
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Hello, we're Jeanine and Jack.

We love to eat, travel, cook, and eat some more! We create & photograph vegetarian recipes from our home in Chicago, while our shiba pups eat the kale stems that fall on the kitchen floor.

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