Homepage

Accessibility links

  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help
BBC Account
Notifications
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Bitesize
  • Arts
  • Taster
  • Local
  • Three
  • Menu
Search
Travel
  • Culture
  • Food
  • Discovery
  • Experiences
  • Destinations
  • Series
  • About us
  • 50 Reasons to Love the World
Menu
  • Culture
  • Food
  • Discovery
  • Experiences
  • Destinations
  • Series
  • About us
  • 50 Reasons to Love the World

Share

  • Share by Email
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Pinterest
  • Share on WhatsApp
  • Share by Email
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Pinterest
  • Share on Reddit
Slide of
Loading gallery...

Madfouna: Morocco’s surprising take on pizza

By Chris Griffiths 23 January 2018

Traditionally baked in the sands of the Sahara, Moroccan madfouna is locally joked as being the Berber take on pizza and is sliced into pieces to be shared among many.

Scroll to view the gallery
Sahara, Morocco (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

The Saharan regions of Morocco are home to ancient culinary practices (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

The Saharan regions of Morocco are home to ancient culinary practices that provide the means for the Amazigh (as known as Berbers), an ethnic group indigenous to North Africa, to survive in otherwise inhospitable environments. The quality of food lends itself not to the sophistication of modern machinery, but to the skill and determination of the people.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Madfouna – a stuffed flatbread prepared using a handful of staple (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Madfouna – a stuffed flatbread prepared using a handful of staple ingredients – is traditionally baked in a fire pit in the sand or a mud oven, and has long served as a wholesome meal for many families who live on the fringes of the Erg Chebbi dunes near the Algerian border. Once baked, the bread so closely resembles a pizza that it is locally nicknamed ‘the Berber pizza’.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

The madfouna dough is kneaded to an elastic consistency (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Using an ancient Saharan bread recipe incorporating flour, yeast, salt, olive oil and water, the dough is kneaded to an elastic consistency and then rolled into to a round shape before being stretched over fillings – including beef, eggs, nuts, onions and garlic, and herbs and spices such as cumin, paprika, turmeric, ginger and parsley – and pinched closed.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Food needs to be easy to prepare in the Sahara (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

With limited resources in the Sahara’s arid terrains, food needs to be easy to prepare. When an oven is not available, people use more rustic methods for cooking the stuffed bread by working with the elements available, such as fire.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza, metal tin, fire (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Madfouna dough is covered with a metal tin (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

The people dig a hole in the sand and then light a small fire to heat stones placed at the base. Madfouna dough is added directly on top of the hot stones and covered with a metal tin or with the sand itself.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Madfouna crust must be beaten off with a cloth and scraped away with a knife (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

A charred-black crust forms where the bread has directly touched the open flames and hot stones, and must be beaten off with a cloth and scraped away with a knife before eating.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

the madfouna is sliced into pieces to be shared among many (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Finally, the madfouna is sliced into pieces to be shared among many.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

The traditional practice of cooking in a mud oven remains common (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Although the recipe stems from ancient cooking techniques, not all madfouna is prepared in a fire pit. The traditional practice of cooking in a mud oven remains common for many families living in small towns dotted across the Sahara. Their rammed-earth homes often allocate a well-ventilated room or an outdoor space for preparing food with this method.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Every family has their own version of madfouna (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Every family has their own version of madfouna. Some use more basic ingredients such as eggs, tomatoes and sunflower or poppy seeds, while others add almonds, cashews, olives, lamb, chicken, minced beef or slices of cooked steak. The options are virtually endless.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Madfouna has an unrivalled smoky taste that cannot be replicated by a modern oven (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Whichever ingredients make up the filling, one thing is agreed upon across the region: the authentic methods of cooking madfouna in desert sands or using a mud oven undoubtedly leads to the most delicious version, complete with an unrivalled smoky taste that cannot be replicated by a modern, conventional oven.  

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Rissani is a sleepy Saharan town famed for madfouna (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Today, madfouna can mostly be found in small Berber pizza takeaway joints in Rissani, a sleepy Saharan town famed for the dish. Adjacent to the crumbling ruins of Sijilmasa, a medieval Saharan city that served as a trading stronghold along the caravan routes transporting goods to sub-Saharan Africa, the modern-day town humbly stands as a gateway to the dunes.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

‘Pizza’ symbols to mark where you can order a takeaway madfouna (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

In Rissani, a slightly faster pace of life than in the desert leads to a greater demand for fast food. Tucked within the narrow streets of the market and conveniently placed near the taxi stands lie small ‘hole in the wall’ takeaway joints with ‘pizza’ symbols to mark where you can order a takeaway madfouna, the primary dish on the menu.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Chefs rotate madfouna orders in the large fire ovens (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

It’s not uncommon for these eateries to get so busy that people queue for more than an hour as the chefs rotate their orders in the large fire ovens, which are also used to bake fresh bread and slow roast lamb, beef and whole chickens.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Each madfouna is particular to each individual’s tastes (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Each madfouna is so particular to each individual’s tastes that locals often bring their own fillings – sourced from trusted butchers or prepared at home by family members – which they ask the chefs to bake into their orders.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Berber-style flat breads are even served to go in a cardboard box (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

The hole-in-the-wall eateries so closely resemble fast food pizza takeaways that the freshly baked Berber-style flatbreads are even served to go in a cardboard box.

Madfouna, Morocco, Berber, pizza (Credit: Credit: Chris Griffiths)

Madfouna is the perfect shareable food to grab before heading on a journey through the Sahara (Credit: Chris Griffiths)

It’s the perfect shareable food to grab before heading on a journey through the Moroccan Sahara.

More amazing galleries

AK6 A1319 2
  • Culinary Roots

The tender stew cooked by bachelors

It’s so easy to make that the preparation can ‘even be trusted’ to men

  • Morocco
  • Food & Drink
Beautiful plate of oshi palav (Credit: Amanda Ruggeri)
  • Welcome to Our House

Is this ‘the king of meals’?

The most skilled cooks can make the dish for 500 people at once

  • Asia
  • Food & Drink
  • Hospitality
Mai tokoch and borsook on the table in Kyrgyzstan (Credit: Amanda Ruggeri)
  • Culinary Roots

The bread that feeds the dead

It can also end drought, turn bad luck and ward off evil spirits

  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Food & Drink
Once the pilgrims wash and rest, it;s time to eat during Arbaeen (Credit: Credit: Leila Molana-Allen)
  • Welcome to Our House

Why Iraqis are so generous

Every year, one city throws open its doors to millions of pilgrims

  • Middle East
  • Food & Drink
  • Hospitality
  • Cultural Traditions

Explore the BBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Bitesize
  • Arts
  • Taster
  • Local
  • Three
  • Terms of Use
  • About the BBC
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility Help
  • Parental Guidance
  • Contact the BBC
  • Get Personalised Newsletters
Copyright © 2021 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.