The recipe for these tasty halloumi bread rolls was inspired by one I tried in a Greek restaurant in Sydney, Australia. I don't know the actual recipe used, so I adapted my standard bread recipe and tried out a few variations.
When making a large loaf with raw halloumi, I ended up with a 'soggy bottom'! I found that I needed to cook the cheese first, to remove the excess moisture, and then had to cool it before adding to the dough.
So, I tried adapting my pizza whirl recipe instead, and it worked a treat using raw halloumi, as the moisture could evaporate.
For the bread base
When making a large loaf with raw halloumi, I ended up with a 'soggy bottom'! I found that I needed to cook the cheese first, to remove the excess moisture, and then had to cool it before adding to the dough.
So, I tried adapting my pizza whirl recipe instead, and it worked a treat using raw halloumi, as the moisture could evaporate.
For the bread base
- 1 cup cold water
- 3 cups strong white bread flour
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 sachet fast-action dried yeast
- 1 tsp sugar
- ½ tsp salt
For the filling
- 200g halloumi, finely diced
- ½ cup chopped fresh mint, or around 2-3 tsp dried mint
- 2 tbsp olive oil
Mix well until you have a smooth dough (on dough setting in bread maker).
Add a little more flour if the dough is too sticky.
Cover the bowl and allow to rise in a warm place for 30-60 minutes.
Dust a large board or clean table with a little flour.
Roll the dough into a rectangle, approx 25cm x 40cm.
Sprinkle the halloumi and mint over, leaving a border at the front and sides.
Roll the dough lengthwise, as tightly as you can (like a Swiss roll).
Making sure the dough roll is seam-side down on the board, cut slices approximately 1.5cm thick.
Place on a greased baking sheet, with a little room to expand.
Drizzle with the olive oil.
Place on a greased baking sheet, with a little room to expand.
Drizzle with the olive oil.
Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 200C/190C Fan/Gas 6 .
Bake for around 10-15 minutes, or until well-risen and golden.
Place onto a wire rack to cool.
Serve warm, with dips, as part of a meze, or instead of a sandwich in a packed lunch.
I'm linking this post to November's Cooking With Herbs challenge
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Serve warm, with dips, as part of a meze, or instead of a sandwich in a packed lunch.
I'm linking this post to November's Cooking With Herbs challenge
A very neat recipe. This is a good idea!
ReplyDeleteThanks :-)
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