Bread & Doughs

Flatbreads Around the World: Naan, Pita, and Focaccia at Home

Make three classic flatbreads at home, from pillowy naan to pocketed pita and dimpled focaccia, with dough tips and cooking methods for each style.

Assorted flatbreads on a wooden board
Photograph via Unsplash

Flatbreads were the first breads humans ever made, and they are still the friendliest place for a home baker to start. You do not need a proofing schedule that eats your whole weekend, and you do not need a fancy oven. What you do need is an understanding of how three very different doughs behave, because naan, pita, and focaccia only look like cousins. Get the handling right and each one rewards you within a couple of hours.

Why Flatbreads Are the Best Entry Point#

I have taught more first-time bakers with a skillet and a ball of naan dough than with any sourdough starter. The reason is simple: flatbreads forgive. A slightly underproofed loaf of sandwich bread is a doorstop, but a slightly underproofed flatbread is still dinner. The feedback loop is fast too. You mix, you rest, you cook, and within the hour you are eating and learning what your hands did right or wrong.

The three breads in this guide cover a genuinely useful range of techniques:

  • Naan teaches you enriched dough and high-heat skillet work.
  • Pita teaches you hydration control and the drama of oven spring in miniature.
  • Focaccia teaches you patience, long fermentation, and how olive oil transforms a crust.

Learn these three and you have quietly picked up most of what you need for the rest of the bread world.

Naan: Soft, Blistered, and Built on Yogurt#

Naan is an enriched flatbread, which is my way of saying there is more going on than flour and water. The classic version leans on yogurt, and that yogurt is doing real work. Its fat and acidity tenderize the gluten and keep the finished bread pliable long after it comes off the heat. A lean flour-and-water flatbread goes stiff as it cools; a yogurt naan stays foldable, which is exactly what you want for scooping curry or wrapping kebabs.

The dough#

Here is the ratio I keep coming back to after years of tinkering:

  1. 500g bread flour for chew, or all-purpose if you prefer a softer crumb.
  2. 7g instant yeast and 1 teaspoon of sugar to feed it.
  3. 120g plain full-fat yogurt, plus enough warm milk or water to bring the dough together, usually around 180 to 220g.
  4. 2 tablespoons of oil or softened butter and a generous teaspoon of salt.

Mix until you have a soft, slightly tacky dough, then knead for five to seven minutes. It should feel supple, not stiff. Let it rise until doubled, roughly an hour in a warm kitchen. Do not chase a specific volume here; naan is not fussy about a perfect proof.

Cooking naan without a tandoor#

A tandoor gets screaming hot and slaps the bread against a clay wall. You do not have one, and neither do I in my kitchen. A cast-iron skillet or a carbon-steel pan gets you most of the way there. Heat it until a drop of water dances and evaporates on contact.

  • Roll each portion into an oval about the thickness of a pencil at the edges, slightly thinner in the middle.
  • Brush the top lightly with water. This is the trick most recipes skip. The wet side goes down first, and the steam it generates helps the bread puff and blister.
  • Cover the pan for the first 30 seconds to trap that steam, then flip and finish uncovered.

You are looking for dark charred spots, not an even golden tan. Those blisters are flavour. Finish with melted butter and, if you like, garlic and coriander.

Pita: The Pocket Is All About Heat#

Pita is the leanest bread here, essentially flour, water, yeast, salt, and a little oil. That simplicity is exactly why so many home bakers get flat, pocketless discs. The pocket is not a matter of a special ingredient. It is a matter of heat and moisture behaving explosively at the same time.

How the pocket actually forms#

When a thin, moist round of dough hits a very hot surface, the water in the dough flashes to steam faster than it can escape. That steam has nowhere to go, so it pushes the top and bottom layers apart and inflates the bread like a balloon. When it cools, the two walls stay separated, and you have your pocket.

Three things make or break it:

  • A rested, evenly rolled round. If the dough is thicker in one spot, steam vents through the weak point instead of building pressure. Roll to an even 4 to 5mm and let the rolled rounds rest for 10 minutes so the gluten relaxes and holds its shape.
  • Serious heat. A baking stone or steel preheated at your oven's maximum, ideally 250C or higher, for a full 45 minutes. A cold or lukewarm surface will never generate the steam burst.
  • Do not overflour. A dry, floury surface on the dough can prevent a good seal and let steam leak out.

A realistic caveat#

Not every pita puffs, and that is genuinely normal. Even in my kitchen, one in a batch of eight sometimes stays flat, usually the one I rolled unevenly or slid onto a spot on the stone that had cooled. A flat pita is not a failure; it is a very good soft flatbread for dipping. If you want the pocket rate up near perfect, cook them one or two at a time so the stone recovers its heat between rounds. You can also finish pita in a hot skillet on the stovetop, which works but tends to give a slightly less reliable pocket than a preheated stone.

Focaccia: Patience, Oil, and the Dimple#

Focaccia is the outlier of the three. Where naan and pita are quick, focaccia is a slow, wet, hands-off dough that trades your active time for a long cold rest in the fridge. It is also the most beginner-proof bread I know, because a high-hydration dough left overnight in the fridge does most of the work while you sleep.

High hydration is the point#

A good focaccia dough runs around 80 percent hydration, meaning 80g of water for every 100g of flour. That is wet, sticky, and unpleasant to knead by hand, so do not knead it. Instead:

  1. Mix flour, water, yeast, and salt into a shaggy mass.
  2. Over the next couple of hours, do three or four sets of stretch-and-folds, wetting your hand and pulling one side of the dough up and over the middle, turning the bowl, and repeating. Each set takes 20 seconds.
  3. Cover and refrigerate for 12 to 24 hours. This long, cold ferment is where the flavour develops.

The next day, tip the dough into a well-oiled pan, let it come to room temperature and relax for an hour or two, and then comes the fun part.

The dimple is not decorative#

Pour a generous slick of good olive oil over the top and press your oiled fingertips straight down to the bottom of the pan, all over the surface. People treat dimpling as a rustic garnish, but it is doing three jobs:

  • It degasses the dough unevenly, so you get that characteristic mix of tall, airy peaks and dense, oil-soaked valleys.
  • The wells hold pools of olive oil and flaky salt, which is where most of focaccia's flavour lives.
  • It gives the craggy, irregular top that crisps and browns beautifully.

Be generous and be confident. Timid dimpling gives you a flat, uniform bread that eats more like a thick pizza base than true focaccia. Finish with flaky salt, maybe rosemary, and bake at around 220C until the top is deeply golden and the edges have gone crisp and lacy where they met the oil.

Sharing Equipment and Ingredients Across All Three#

One of the quiet pleasures of learning these together is how much overlap there is once you look past the surface.

  • Flour: Bread flour gives naan and pita more chew; focaccia is happy with either, though a little bread flour helps it hold those tall air pockets.
  • Heat source: The same baking stone that makes pita puff will give focaccia a better bottom crust, and a cast-iron pan handles both naan and a stovetop-style focaccia if you have no oven space.
  • Fat: Naan wants butter and yogurt, focaccia wants olive oil, and pita wants only a whisper of oil to stay tender. Matching the fat to the bread is most of the character.

If you are baking on a single afternoon, start the focaccia dough the night before, mix your naan and pita doughs together in the morning, and you can realistically put all three on the table for one meal.

A Practical Finish#

Do not try to master all three in one session on your first attempt. Pick the one that matches your mood: naan if you want something fast and hands-on, pita if you enjoy a bit of oven drama, focaccia if you want to plan ahead and be rewarded the next day. Each one teaches a skill that carries straight into other breads, and each one is forgiving enough that even a mediocre first attempt tastes better than anything from a bag. Get your pan or stone properly hot, respect the hydration each dough wants, and trust that a little char, a good pocket, or a craggy dimpled top will come with practice sooner than you think.

Ben Alcott
Written by
Ben Alcott

Ben has kept a sourdough starter alive longer than some friendships and baked through every failure worth learning from. He demystifies bread with honest timelines and real dough photos, because good bread rewards understanding far more than gadgets.

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