Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (2024)

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Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (1)

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A super easy Greek village bread recipe (Horiatiko Psomi) that will amaze you!This is aGreek rustic bread recipe, that I’m absolutelycertain all you bread lovers will enjoy forits simplicity.

For some, making bread is not just a process, but rather something reallyspecial. You will lovethis recipe’s little touches all while waiting patiently for a perfectly proven dough.

And if you’re a novice, I’m sure you’ve tried making bread before and ended up with a mess in yourkitchen and nothing butdisappointment.Don’t worry though, this super easy Greek bread recipe will never fail you!

Which are the most popular types of Greek breads?

Bread is a staple in the Greek cuisine. One can find lots of different types of breads. The most popular Greek breads are “village” bread (rustic bread), pita bread, raisin bread, Greek sesame bread rings and Lagana. Each one is prepared and shaped in a different way and has each own unique texture and taste.
Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (2)

What is Greek village (country) bread?

Village or country bread (Horiatiko psomi) is a type of Greek bread one can find in every Greek bakery. It originates from Greek villages and has a unique flavor and texture. Traditionally it is a denser type of bread that resembles the taste of sourdough bread. It’s main characteristic is that Greek village bread is baked in outdoors wood fired ovens.

The secrets of a perfectly baked Greek bread – A simple homely version

This is an easy simple homely version of the traditional Greek village bread recipe that calls for fresh yeast and a long time proving (overnight). A combination that will give a unique yeast-y taste and texture that resembles sourdough bread.

When preparing this Greek bread recipe it is best to use a “strong” flour known as bread flour which is high in protein. This will help the bread hold it’s shape better and give more texture.

An extra tip is to spread out some semolina on the working surface when kneading the finished dough. Semolina gives homemade bread that extra crisp, that I personally love.

Note: If you don’t have any fresh yeast lying around, you could also use instant yeast (1/3 of the amount of fresh yeast).

Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (3)

How to bake Village bread in an oven?

To bake my Greek bread it’s best to use a casserole dish with a lid or a Dutch oven. Preheat the oven at high temperature (200-210C/ 400F). Bake the bread for 45 minutes with the lid on and another 20 minutes without the lid, until its crusty and golden brown.

This baking technique helps the bread keep its moisture inside. It also helps to form that amazing crust resembling the traditional baking in wood baking ovens.

Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (4)

Other types of breads you may like:

  • Self raising flour bread without yeast
  • Koulouria thessalonikis
  • Raisin bread
  • Lagana bread
  • Greek pita bread
  • Bread machine sourdough bread
  • No knead bread

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Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (5)

Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi)

Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (6)Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (7)Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (8)Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (9)Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (10) (560 votes, average: 4.70 out of 5)
Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (11)Loading...

  • Author: Eli K. Giannopoulos
  • Prep Time: 20 min
  • Cook Time: 65 min
  • Total Time: 85 min
  • Yield: 2 round loafs (approx. 650g each)/ 14 medium slices 1x
  • Category: Breads
  • Method: Baked
  • Cuisine: Greek
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Description

A supereasy Greek village breadrecipe (Horiatiko psomi) that will never fail you! All the secrets for a perfectly baked bread; a homely version for all the bread lovers.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 1 kg bread flour (35oz.)
  • 630ml lukewarm water (21 oz.)
  • 25g fresh yeast (0.8 oz.)
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 2 tbsps olive oil
  • 1 1/2 tbsp salt
  • thin semolina

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Instructions

  1. To prepare this easy Greek bread recipe, start by adding in a large bowl the water, yeast and sugar. Use a fork to completely dissolve the yeast in the water. Set aside for about 5 -10 minutes to activate the yeast. Note: if you don’t have fresh yeast substitute for dried – just use one third of the quantity stated.
  2. Add half the flour a little bit at time whilst mixing with a spoon.Add the olive oil and salt and the rest of the flour and mix with a spoon until all the flour has been absorbed.At this point the dough should be sticky on your hand.
  3. Knead the dough a little bit with your hands until it’s elastic and form into a ball.Place the dough inside a lightly oiled large bowl and cover with cling film.
  4. Let the dough rise at room temperature for 10-12 hours (or overnight).
  5. Deflate the dough. Sprinkle semolina on a large working surface and transfer the dough on the surface. Using a sharp knife divide the dough in 2 equal pieces. (This Greek Bread recipe makes 2 loafs of bread).
  6. Knead each piece of the dough with your hands just enough to have a nice and smooth dough that doesn’t stick too much on your hands (for about 3 minutes). Sprinkle the dough with semolina (2-3 tbsps) when kneading the dough.
  7. Form 2 round loafs and place inside a casserole dish or clay pot with a lid. Score the top of each loaf using a sharp knife. Place the lid on the casserole dish.
  8. Preheat the oven at 250C/ 480F. Bake for 20 minutes with the lid on and another 15 minutes or so with the lid removed, until nicely coloured and crusty.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 slice of bread
  • Calories: 283kcal
  • Sugar: 0.5g
  • Sodium: 749.2mg
  • Fat: 3.2g
  • Saturated Fat: 0.5g
  • Unsaturated Fat: 2.3g
  • Trans Fat: 0g
  • Carbohydrates: 53.4g
  • Fiber: 1.9g
  • Protein: 9g
  • Cholesterol: 0mg

Keywords: Greek bread recipe, Greek village bread, horiatiko psomi

39 Comments

  1. Anita Lawlor

    May 4, 2020 at 17:47 ·Reply

    Can you use dry yeast if you can’t find fresh?

    • Steve

      October 13, 2020 at 02:50 ·Reply

      It says you can in the recipe!

  2. Linsey

    May 13, 2020 at 18:31 ·Reply

    Have you ever used whole wheat flour for this recipe?

    • Andrea

      August 10, 2020 at 23:24 ·Reply

      I have! I usually make half the recipe and use 300g white flour and 100g whole wheat or rye. Turns out really well 🙂

    • Silvy

      January 29, 2023 at 08:34 ·Reply

      Made twice; and both times my dough too loose to form ball of dough.

      Can someone convert the measurements to common US metrics; pretty sure I didn’t make a mistake- used an online convention app.😖

  3. Anna

    August 5, 2020 at 13:55 ·Reply

    What should the diameter of each loaf be? Or the thickness? It just says form 2 round loaves, but for first timers, needs more explanation. Thanks!

    • Steve

      October 13, 2020 at 02:52 ·Reply

      Take 8in diameter and divide by 2 and you get 2 4in diameter loaves!

  4. Allan

    August 9, 2020 at 14:47 ·Reply

    Do you let the loaves rise AFTER shaping them? It sounds like they go directly into the oven from the way the recipe is written.

    • Steve

      October 13, 2020 at 02:53 ·Reply

      Bingo!!

      • Allan

        August 20, 2021 at 14:31

        How should I interpret that? 🙂 I leaving mine to rise until almost doubled in bulk. Whether that’s correct or not, they turn out great, and people rave about the bread.

  5. Maria

    February 6, 2021 at 12:20 ·Reply

    Can you use AP flour?

    • Eli K. Giannopoulos

      February 8, 2021 at 09:58 ·Reply

      Hi Maria! First choice is bread flour but yes you can use all purpose flour, if you don’t have any bread flour in hand.

  6. Sue

    March 5, 2021 at 12:31 ·Reply

    Can I leave the dough 24 hours before cooking?

    • Eli K. Giannopoulos

      March 5, 2021 at 13:24 ·Reply

      Yes but after its done proofing (step 3) put it in the fridge to stop it proofing any further.

  7. Steve

    April 18, 2021 at 22:28 ·Reply

    If you double it do you need to bake it longer?

    • Eli K. Giannopoulos

      April 19, 2021 at 16:30 ·Reply

      Hi Steve

      If you’re baking 4 loaves instead of 2 then no it wouldn’t need more baking time. If you’re making a larger loaf, it would depend on whether the loaf is larger or simply longer/wider. I would recommend using the same time and taking it out of the oven and tapping underneath. If it sounds hollow its done.

  8. Steve

    April 20, 2021 at 13:53 ·Reply

    I made this the other night! When it came out and was all cooled off it was
    too moist, almost like cake instead of bread! What did I do wrong?

    • Eli K. Giannopoulos

      April 27, 2021 at 10:39 ·Reply

      Probably needed a bit longer in the oven and possibly a little bit more kneading in the third step to develop the gluten. Also it may have been the flour – it needs to be bread flour (strong white) 🙂

  9. Allan

    August 4, 2021 at 14:51 ·Reply

    65 minutes for a ~500g loaf of bread seems a long time …?

    • Eli K. Giannopoulos

      August 6, 2021 at 07:45 ·Reply

      Hi Allan

      Ah thank you for spotting this! I’ve updated the times, its about 20 minutes with the lid on and another 15-20 minutes with the lid off but at a higher temperature!

  10. Jennifer

    September 2, 2021 at 14:50 ·Reply

    Steps 7 & 8: Could you please answer the question that Allan asked about after the loaves are formed.
    Do you let the loaves rise a final time and then put into a preheated oven? Or, put them in the oven without a final full rise?

    Thank you.

    • Malia

      January 29, 2024 at 14:46 ·Reply

      I’ve made this recipe many times now. I always allow to rise a really long time. The final proof (after shaping the loaf and before the bake is the only proof you need to worry about in terms of not under or over proofing. I usually do about 45-min to one hour for the final proof, which I do in a parchment-lined Dutch oven with lid on. But depending on the heat of your kitchen, you may need less or more time. Use a finger test — when depressing your finger lightly into the dough, does it spring right back? It’s underproofed. Does it leave a deep hole that never fills? Overproofed. You want your dough to be puffy but to still fill your finger indentation back in at least partly. At that stage, sprinkle with more semolina or bread flour, make a couple slashes, replace lid and bake as directed.

  11. Sharon

    September 26, 2021 at 16:12 ·Reply

    The description says to bake at 400 degrees but the instructions say 480. Is this a typo? Which is correct?

  12. Steve

    January 2, 2022 at 21:48 ·Reply

    I add feta and kalamata olives to this recipe. Do I need to adjust anything?

  13. Susan

    March 16, 2022 at 04:52 ·Reply

    Can the dough for this bread be made in a bread machine, then back in an oven?

    • Ant

      February 23, 2023 at 03:05 ·Reply

      Yes absolutely, Turkish villager bread (çoban ekmek) is almost similar to Greek village bread and using the “dough” setting on your machine with instant yeast replaces the need for a 10 hour rest.
      I can make a 900 gramme loaf in 2 hours.

  14. Azaelea Prawn

    March 29, 2022 at 08:53 ·Reply

    Just repeating Sharon’s question description says “Preheat the oven at high temperature (200-210C/ 400F). Bake the bread for 45 minutes with the lid on and another 20 minutes without the lid, until its crusty and golden brown”
    Recipe instructions are ” Preheat the oven at 250C/ 480F. Bake for 20 minutes with the lid on and another 15 minutes or so with the lid removed, until nicely coloured and crusty”.
    I’m leaning toward 480F oven as I think that temp would create lots of steam quickly to create the great crusts. but a definite answer would be great.

    • Eve Ellison

      July 30, 2022 at 20:58 ·Reply

      Hi did you ever get an answer to oven/timing query?

      • Vasiliki

        December 12, 2022 at 22:00

        Hi Eve,
        In the narrative, you say to bake covered for 45 minutes at 400°F & uncovered for another 20. But on step 8 of the instructions, you say to bake at 480°F (which sounds high) for 20 min with lid on and 15 min with lid off. Which is it? I didn’t notice the discrepancy till I started baking, so I reset the temp to 425 & am keeping an eye on it. I hope it turns out ok.

  15. Daphne

    March 31, 2022 at 04:09 ·Reply

    Is it necessary to heat the dutch oven before baking?

    • Carl

      October 15, 2023 at 07:38 ·Reply

      Yes

  16. billy bob joe

    February 15, 2023 at 15:24 ·Reply

    this was delicious

  17. Andreas

    March 24, 2023 at 19:14 ·Reply

    Does anything change if I didn’t cut into two loves and left it as one large one?

  18. Erika colee

    March 30, 2023 at 16:47 ·Reply

    Your instructions are still confusing. What is the correct baking temp? Is it 480 or 400 F? Bake times? Let it proof a second time after shaping? The dutch ovens you speak of? Do you preheat it in the oven?

    • Malia

      January 29, 2024 at 14:54 ·Reply

      I’m just a home baker but I’ve made this a bunch.

      Dutch oven should not be preheated in the oven – I line with parchment and let my loaf proof in it one final time before baking.

      Final proofing needed after shaping? Yes, always.

      The high temp is accurate . You want to create steam quickly. My oven runs very hot so I have to turn down to 450 though, so may need to pay attention to your oven. But basically, follow the baking instructions in the recipe step 8, not the narrative.

      Another reason such high temperatures: you are creating a crispy, crunchy crust.

      Best of luck!

  19. Anna

    December 3, 2023 at 22:00 ·Reply

    I was so excited to find this recipe and try it! I love the bread from my childhood. My dough was much wetter than described … it’s in the oven now but I don’t have high hopes ☹️ any recommendations? Thank you

  20. J blais

    December 12, 2023 at 11:26 ·Reply

    480 f it’s way too much and timing way too long

  21. Clay

    December 16, 2023 at 18:34 ·Reply

    The questions regarding time and Temperature still NEED answering. 250C/480F seems awful HOT.
    Otherwise looks like a winner recipe…..

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Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (16)

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Greek Bread recipe (Village bread/ Horiatiko Psomi) (2024)

FAQs

What bread is popular in Greece? ›

The Koulouria is one of the most popular loaves of bread in the entirety of Greece, and it's not hard to see why! While it appears to be a simple ring of break, there are many different types, including Koulouri Thessalonikis - which you can find on our menu.

Why is the bread yellow in Greece? ›

It is traditionally made from a 'country' flour, which is a mix of wheat flours and fine cornmeal, which gives it a light yellow colour, and is topped with sesame and nigella seeds, some recipes also include nigella seeds in the dough.

What did the Greeks use to make bread? ›

On the contrary to any concept of bread we may have nowadays (i.e. wheaten, leavened, baked), was the « maza » of the ancient Greeks, a very popular food made of barley meal, the preparation of which did not involve either leavening or baking (Micha-Lampaki 1984, Braun 1995).

What are the names of Greek flat breads? ›

Pita
Pita from Greece
Alternative namesPide, Khubz
TypeFlatbread
Region or stateEastern Mediterranean, Middle East
Main ingredientsWheat flour, water, yeast, salt
1 more row

What is the difference between Greek bread and Italian bread? ›

Italian bread tends to have a crisp crust and a soft interior. Some varieties, like ciabatta, may include olive oil. Shape and Texture:Greek Bread (Psomi): Greek bread, especially traditional village-style bread, is often round or oval in shape. It tends to have a dense and chewy texture with a thicker crust.

What is Greece's national dish? ›

And every restaurant featured their version of moussaka, which some might say is the national dish of Greece. Moussaka is an iconic eggplant casserole featuring layers of eggplant, potatoes and a rich tomato meat sauce.

What kind of flour is used in Greece? ›

There are 2 main types of Greek flour, Strong and Soft. From those 2 types all kinds of flour are produced. Strong flour is produced form a wheat variety that is grown only in Greece and has high protein percentage. Soft flour is the most common flour, used in every day bread and pastry making.

Do Greeks eat bread at every meal? ›

For lunch and dinner, bread is the accompaniment to all meals. A big basket of sliced or ripped apart bread is always seen at the kitchen table just waiting to be eaten. Bread steeped in traditions in Greek culture too. As Easter is the most relevant time in Greek tradition, so is the Easter bread tsoureki.

What bread did ancient Greeks eat? ›

Among the variety of breads were raised breads, coarse brown bread from emmer wheat and barley, white bread from fine flour, oven bread, bread baked in ashes and wafer bread, as well as soft cakes, such as sesame cake and barley cakes.

Who is the Greek god of bread making? ›

Deipneus (Ancient Greek: Δειπνεύς) in Greek mythology is a demi-god of the preparation of meals, specifically the making of bread.

How do you eat Greek bread? ›

You can cut it into triangles, drizzle them with olive oil, sprinkle them with sumac or za'atar and toast them in the oven, to dip in babaganoush or hummus or tzatziki. You can use it to make a wrap. You can even eat it just by itself, warm from the oven.

What type of food was not often eaten in ancient Greece? ›

Milk, usually goats' milk, was not widely consumed, being considered barbaric.

Is there a Greek god of bread? ›

According to Greek mythology, Demeter is the Goddess of Agriculture. She represents good harvests, grain and bread, fruits and vegetation, and the nourishment and growth of the earth, hence her additional title as the Harvest Goddess.

What is the Greek word for bread? ›

Etymology. Artos in Ancient Greek meant "cake", "loaf of wheat-bread", collectively "bread", but in Modern Greek it is now more commonly used in the context of communion bread used in church, having been replaced in the broader context by the word ψωμί, psomi.

How did ancient Greeks make bread? ›

The most common grain used was barley. This bread was called maza and was simply ground barley mixed with water, then cooked over a fire. There are some mentions of leavened bread by ancient Greek authors but this was a rarity. To grind the grain the ancient Greeks used querns.

What is the most popular grain eaten in Greece? ›

Top Grains for Traditional Greek Cooks
  • Semolina. Semolina is a grain that comes from durum wheat. ...
  • Barley. Barley is a grain that has a long history in the Greek culture. ...
  • Bulgur. Bulgur hasn't always been popular in Greek cuisine, but it's made a comeback. ...
  • Whole Wheat Berries. ...
  • Corn. ...
  • Sprouted Wheat.

What kind of bread do they eat in the Mediterranean? ›

Is sourdough bread allowed on the Mediterranean diet? Any bread that is made from whole wheat, whole grains, sprouts, and sourdough is recommended while on a Mediterranean diet. You will want to avoid bread made from refined grains, such as white bread if you are following this diet.

Is pita bread common in Greece? ›

In Greece, it's a relatively recent import. Until a few years ago, it was used almost exclusively for gyros, a street food that's based off of Turkish doner. In any other circ*mstance, Greeks don't traditionally eat pita bread; Greeks traditionally eat loaves similar to those in Italy or France.

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