1
["Heat oven to 450 degrees. If you have a pizza or other baking stone slightly larger than your lavash, heat it, too. You can make these on a standard cookie sheet if you don't have a pizza stone. Each batch will take a minute or so longer per tray.", "Put one lavash on a piece of parchment paper that's a few inches larger on each side, that you've put on a cookie sheet that has one open side (or a pizza peel, if yours is large enough). Brush olive oil generously on the lavash. (Actually, I find that drizzling it on and then using a spatula to spread it works better than a brush.)", "Sprinkle on dukkah (see instructions below) or za'atar, or any other spices you like. If your blend does not include salt, sprinkle some of that on, too.", "Use a pizza cutter to cut the lavash into sixteen triangles, or whatever other shapes you like. (See my photo above for one way to do it.)", "Slide the parchment paper onto the hot pizza stone, or onto a baking sheet in the oven. Put the timer on! Start with 2 minutes and check immediately, as these go from just right to burned in about five seconds.", "When lightly brown on the edges, remove immediately from the stone or baking sheet and let cool on the paper on a cooling rack for about 3 minutes; then take them off the parchment paper immediately and let them cool on a wire rack. This is important, to allow them to get crisp. Repeat for the other lavash. Store in a tightly lidded container.", "I hope you like these. Sincerely, AntoniaJames ;o)", "*** TO MAKE THE DUKKAH *** Toast the pepitas or pumpkin seeds in a small heavy skillet until they just start to darken and release their fragrance. Remove to a cutting board while you toast the other ingredients.", "Toast the cumin and coriander seeds, each in turn, in the same skillet, removing from the pan as soon as they start to darken. Do not tarry, lest they burn.", "Toast the sesame seeds in the same skillet, shaking periodically to make sure they brown evenly. Remove when they start to darken just a bit.