Kaak Recipes
Balochistan's stone-baked unleavened bread — a flat disc of wheat dough baked directly on hot river stones. So hard it must be soaked in tea or water before eating. Shepherds have carried it for centuries. The most durable bread in Pakistan.
What is Kaak?
Balochistan's stone-baked unleavened bread — a flat disc of wheat dough baked directly on hot river stones. So hard it must be soaked in tea or water before eating. Shepherds have carried it for centuries. The most durable bread in Pakistan.
Regional Variants at a Glance
| Variant | Region | Prep | Cook | Difficulty | Serves |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kaak | Balochistan | 30m | 30m | Easy | 4 |
| Balochi Kaak — The Desert Dry Bread | Balochistan | 2h | 1h 30m | Medium | 8 |
| KP Kaak — Mountain Version | KP | 2h | 1h 30m | Medium | 8 |
All Kaak Recipes
Kaak
Kaak is the ancient hard bread of Balochistan's shepherds — thick wheat discs baked until iron-hard, deliberately designed to survive weeks in a saddle bag without spoiling. Dip it in tea, soak it in broth, or break off a piece and eat it with Rosh. Once you try it, you'll understand why it has been feeding mountain communities for centuries.
Balochi Kaak — The Desert Dry Bread
Balochistan's ancient hardtack-like dry bread — double-baked until completely moisture-free, it keeps for weeks without refrigeration and was the traditional bread of Baloch nomads, shepherds, and desert travelers.
KP Kaak — Mountain Version
The KP mountain version of double-baked kaak — slightly richer with a touch of oil and sesame seeds, reflecting the different ingredients available to mountain communities compared to the desert Balochi version.