Composition / ingredients
Step-by-step cooking
Step 1:
How to make dough for pies without kefir and yeast on water? Prepare all ingredients. Wash the chicken egg and dry it with a napkin. Take wheat flour of the highest grade. I recommend taking bottled or filtered water.
Step 2:
Pour the water into a small ladle or saucepan and put it on the stove. Preheat the water to about 60C, then remove the ladle from the heat and dissolve the salt in warm water. Take a container for kneading dough and sift wheat flour into it through a fine sieve.
Step 3:
Set aside about a spoonful of flour - add it to the dough as needed. In the center of the sifted flour, make a recess into which pour salted warm water. Start gently mixing the ingredients first with a spoon or fork so as not to burn your hands. Then continue to knead the dough with your hands. Keep in mind that you may have more or less flour than indicated in the composition. To do this, we put aside some of the flour.
Step 4:
In the process of kneading, drive a raw chicken egg into the dough and continue to knead it well. When the dough can be formed into a ball, transfer it to a floured work surface. Knead the dough with your hands for 10 minutes. The dough should become elastic and soft and not stick to your hands.
Step 5:
Put the kneaded dough into a bowl, sprinkle lightly with flour and set aside for half an hour, covered with a napkin or towel. When the time is up, knead the dough with your hands and you can start making pies.
The recipe is well suited for pies, both baked and deep-fried, both with sweet and salty filling. It can also be used to prepare the base for pizza, tortillas, fruit biscuits and even Viennese strudel.
For greater elasticity of the dough, I recommend adding 1-2 tablespoons of vegetable oil to it when kneading.
From this amount of ingredients I got 12 pies. This figure is, of course, indicative, since the sizes of your pies may differ from mine.
Be prepared for the fact that flour may need more or less than indicated in the recipe. Focus not on the amount of flour, but on the desired consistency of the dough. To avoid mistakes, read about flour and its properties!
Caloric content of products possible in the composition of the dish
- Chicken egg - 157 kcal/100g
- Egg white - 45 kcal/100g
- Egg powder - 542 kcal/100g
- Egg yolk - 352 kcal/100g
- Ostrich egg - 118 kcal/100g
- Whole durum wheat flour fortified - 333 kcal/100g
- Whole durum wheat flour, universal - 364 kcal/100g
- Flour krupchatka - 348 kcal/100g
- Flour - 325 kcal/100g
- Salt - 0 kcal/100g
- Water - 0 kcal/100g