Chorizo Feta Braid
I buy sausages freely without thought for when or how they'll come into play. This recipe uses a couple of raw/uncured chorizo that had been hanging around in my freezer for a few months without purpose.
You enjoy cooking—mostly. You care about your ingredients. One weekend you’re picking up a wedge of cloth-aged cheddar at the farmers’ market, the next you’re grabbing a block of supermarket tasty because you’re starving. Cooking is something you like to do, when the inspiration’s there. But sometimes… the mojo goes missing.
Enter: flatbreads. Australia has entered its flatbread era and honestly, it just makes sense.
In recent history, we all experienced the romance of sourdough, some of us even named our starters (RIP Jane Dough, Bread Pitt, and Bubbles). We learned about autolyse, hydration ratios, and cold-proofing and, for a while there, it was meditative and deeply satisfying. But now? Time’s tighter. The thought of maintaining a living jar of flour and water feels less ‘nurturing’ and more ‘third job.’
So what’s next for us once-keen bakers who still want that hands-on, homemade satisfaction minus the 12-hour commitment?
Flatbreads, obviously.
Every food culture has a flatbread. And in Australia, we’re lucky enough to be surrounded by all of them—from wood-fired Lebanese bread at the corner bakery to the roti from your favourite Malaysian place to pillowy naan at your local Indian joint.
Even chefs are putting flatbreads front and centre on their menus:
Flatbreads are having a serious moment, and they’re absolutely earning it. These unpretentious, wildly versatile breads tick all the boxes:
Flatbreads are low-effort and high-reward—exactly the kind of cooking we need when we’re standing in the kitchen at 6pm staring at a tin of chickpeas and wondering what to make.
This is the kind of cooking that suits the ‘what-have-I-got-in-the-cupboard’ crowd. A quick dough, a hot pan and whatever toppings you can find. Flatbreads are ideal for those nights you want to feel like a cook, without making it a production.
And when you do feel like being one of those meal prep people? Flatbreads freeze beautifully.
Flatbreads can go as big or as basic as you want.
Top one with roast pumpkin, feta and dukkah and suddenly Tuesday dinner’s a bit fancy. Or roll them up with scrambled eggs and hot sauce and pretend you’re brunching in your own café minus the bill. Squish some spiced mince on top and fry for a quick twist on the classic lahmacun.
So maybe the sourdough starter’s long gone, but your hands can still make something warm, satisfying, and entirely yours.
Flatbreads: they’re simple, versatile, and ready when you are.
I buy sausages freely without thought for when or how they'll come into play. This recipe uses a couple of raw/uncured chorizo that had been hanging around in my freezer for a few months without purpose.
Some days cooking feels like a slog and you need a little something extra to make your meal sing. The good news is you don’t need to spend hours in the kitchen - or restaurant-grade equipment - to create that sense of “oof, that’s special.”
I couldn’t possibly count the number of fish cakes I’ve eaten in my lifetime. As kids, we ate these so many times over summer using up the endless flathead Dad would catch in the bay. He was happy to fish and we were happy to eat.