Member Omid posted an excellent and very comprehensive blog on Iranian Barbari bread which can be viewed here if you haven't seen it:
Flour (half T55 half generic) - 366g (in total), Water - 250g, Salt - 7g, Fresh Yeast - 1g
Into the hot oven it went for about 12mins and out it came like this:
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Looks fantastic. Excellent. Thanks for sharing. CAphyl
Very good i'm impressed a good write up on your take of a previous article that i had missed first time round, something i will like to try myself soon (cooler weather) 43 C here yesterday, and 41 today!
Kind regards Derek
Very tasty looking bread, one I think I should try out.
I have to try it.
Karin
Dear El Panadero, you have done a great job as someone new to the world of barbari bread. I am truly surprised at how well you executed this. You are a fast learner! Perchance, it was your pre-established knowledge and skills that made the bread easy for you to make. I have known newbies who are still having difficulties in preparing barbari breads after months of trials. You are officially a barbarian. Welcome to the tribe!
Omid
a lot of Fresh Lofians will be giving this bread a go after your and Omid's fine examples. Well done!
Hello ElPanadero,
Admiring very much, your bake of the barbari bread; it looks perfect!
:^) breadsong
.. we own a house in Iran, and if you've never been there, you'd love to see how this bread is made traditionally. On the street, with crowds in anxious waiting, loaf after loaf is cooked on hot gravel. As the bread is removed, special people sit aside who's job it is to pick out the hot gravel which they toss on the sidewalk. Even consumers are found grabbing the hot bread and bringing it to one of the designated tables for gravel picking. This bread is so delicious… I am really warm hearted to see it even exists here! And that crumb…
Hi tea berries ! what you are describing seems to me as sangak not barbari !! gravel being used for sangak ! ain't it