The Japan Times - Afghan bread, the humble centrepiece of every meal

EUR -
AED 3.820434
AFN 78.462082
ALL 98.276612
AMD 418.900309
ANG 1.88167
AOA 950.162399
ARS 1089.268287
AUD 1.660639
AWG 1.874857
AZN 1.732351
BAM 1.955335
BBD 2.107998
BDT 127.3197
BGN 1.952803
BHD 0.392048
BIF 3089.324195
BMD 1.040142
BND 1.412791
BOB 7.214283
BRL 6.18843
BSD 1.044052
BTN 90.263651
BWP 14.440563
BYN 3.416687
BYR 20386.792289
BZD 2.097201
CAD 1.49768
CDF 2959.205511
CHF 0.944426
CLF 0.037358
CLP 1030.760663
CNY 7.580457
CNH 7.584412
COP 4432.047038
CRC 525.080088
CUC 1.040142
CUP 27.563775
CVE 110.238765
CZK 25.152985
DJF 185.915755
DKK 7.460641
DOP 64.065369
DZD 140.865122
EGP 52.297008
ERN 15.602137
ETB 133.551901
FJD 2.407254
FKP 0.856648
GBP 0.845142
GEL 2.974615
GGP 0.856648
GHS 15.817236
GIP 0.856648
GMD 75.930332
GNF 9025.025731
GTQ 8.070002
GYD 218.328042
HKD 8.102856
HNL 26.57993
HRK 7.675781
HTG 136.340175
HUF 410.576997
IDR 16902.315035
ILS 3.708971
IMP 0.856648
INR 89.898109
IQD 1367.661371
IRR 43789.997421
ISK 145.900547
JEP 0.856648
JMD 163.822588
JOD 0.737983
JPY 162.778656
KES 134.438519
KGS 90.958688
KHR 4209.079243
KMF 491.567106
KPW 936.128333
KRW 1494.544326
KWD 0.320582
KYD 0.870093
KZT 543.870568
LAK 22773.580274
LBP 93493.650095
LKR 311.775803
LRD 206.718817
LSL 19.289309
LTL 3.07127
LVL 0.629172
LYD 5.135778
MAD 10.417721
MDL 19.471366
MGA 4893.882389
MKD 61.517403
MMK 3378.342149
MNT 3534.404203
MOP 8.375026
MRU 41.584503
MUR 48.377273
MVR 16.028848
MWK 1810.386564
MXN 21.324375
MYR 4.622448
MZN 66.475552
NAD 19.289309
NGN 1621.498646
NIO 38.421595
NOK 11.742062
NPR 144.425018
NZD 1.839087
OMR 0.400394
PAB 1.044052
PEN 3.894236
PGK 4.251029
PHP 61.063612
PKR 291.130316
PLN 4.215022
PYG 8258.034728
QAR 3.810493
RON 4.976144
RSD 117.112757
RUB 103.082635
RWF 1464.765493
SAR 3.901971
SBD 8.814925
SCR 14.823966
SDG 625.125475
SEK 11.474695
SGD 1.411666
SHP 0.856648
SLE 23.613267
SLL 21811.26731
SOS 596.663741
SRD 36.488201
STD 21528.848959
SVC 9.135826
SYP 13523.932298
SZL 19.274413
THB 35.385608
TJS 11.426871
TMT 3.6509
TND 3.313811
TOP 2.436117
TRY 37.089457
TTD 7.092312
TWD 34.112825
TZS 2616.998236
UAH 43.850586
UGX 3842.085649
USD 1.040142
UYU 45.689566
UZS 13561.772528
VES 57.926365
VND 26138.780113
VUV 123.487802
WST 2.913259
XAF 655.807234
XAG 0.034054
XAU 0.000378
XCD 2.811037
XDR 0.804416
XOF 655.80093
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.047289
ZAR 19.319949
ZMK 9362.504306
ZMW 29.103074
ZWL 334.925449
  • RBGPF

    61.2800

    61.28

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.58

    -1.9%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.15

    -1.04%

  • NGG

    -1.5400

    60.05

    -2.56%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.49

    -0.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.96

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    -0.3500

    33.43

    -1.05%

  • RIO

    -0.6100

    61.12

    -1%

  • BCC

    -1.2000

    127.92

    -0.94%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    7.42

    +2.02%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    49.26

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    36.57

    -0.44%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    8.38

    -2.03%

  • BP

    -0.3900

    31.13

    -1.25%

  • AZN

    0.2400

    68.2

    +0.35%

Afghan bread, the humble centrepiece of every meal
Afghan bread, the humble centrepiece of every meal / Photo: Wakil KOHSAR - AFP

Afghan bread, the humble centrepiece of every meal

Every day before dawn, Jamil Ghafori gets to work on the floor of a cramped Kabul bakery with five other men churning out thousands of traditional flatbreads -- the staple of every Afghan meal.

Text size:

The common bread Ghafori has made for 27 years is fluffy with a satisfying crunchy edge, where each piece has been slapped onto the wall of an earthen oven sunk into the floor.

Afghans rely on bread, he told AFP. So he and his colleagues, each in charge of one part of the five-step process, take pride in their work.

"We always try to provide good bread for people, our customers must be satisfied," he said in the north of the Afghan capital.

Piles of bread -- some round, some stretched into canoe-like shapes, some sprinkled with sesame seeds or sugar -- overlap like roof tiles lining the slanting display windows of bakeries in the Afghan capital.

Their bright lights pour out over streets on seemingly every corner.

"Afghanistan has a long tradition of relying on bread," said bakery worker Shafiq. "Here bread consumption might go up, but it will never go down."

He said his shop sells around 3,500 a day, as he handed pieces folded into plastic bags out the window from his perch encircled by bread on display.

Men, women and children, rich and poor, rain or shine, stop by multiple times daily at their closest bakery for fresh bread to accompany their meals.

"In Afghanistan, without bread, eating a meal with others is incomplete," said Mohammad Masi, 28, while picking up several rounds on his way home on his bike on a recent chilly night.

"Bread is one of Afghanistan's most beloved and famous foods," he said.

Thick halves of homemade hardy loaves dotted the colourful cloth spread on the floor of Beg Murad Nabizada's home in eastern Kabul, where he shares evening meals with his family of four.

Most days it is the only time they can eat together.

"We prefer to make our bread at home because it's baked with our own hands," 51-year-old Nabizada said, scooping up rice, beans and salad between pieces of bread.

"Since I was born I have never gone a day without bread, thank God," he said. "Even if we had nothing else, we always had a piece of bread."

- Breakfast, lunch and dinner -

For many in Afghanistan -- one of the poorest countries in the world where 12.4 million people live in acute food insecurity, according to the World Food Programme -- bread makes up the largest part of meals.

Afghan bread is one of the few foods that everyone can afford, with prices as low as 10 Afghanis (0.14 US cents) to 50 Afghanis.

"Here, poor people often only have bread to eat... with tea or water," said school teacher Azeem.

"Afghanistan has been impacted by wars, its people are poor, and their economic situation is not good. So when they earn some money, they buy a bit of bread for their families."

Women in blue burkas huddle with children outside the brightly lit bakery windows, hoping someone will buy an extra piece for them.

For Wahida, 30, when her family sank into deep poverty two years ago, she turned to making bread to survive and feed her children.

She produces it at one of the women-run, home-based bakeries dotted around the outskirts of Kabul and often found in rural areas.

"Bread is important, it's beloved and eaten the most," she said.

"Us rural people, we like homemade, and those who don't want to bake buy from bakeries," she added, wetting the back of a stretched piece of dough before reaching deep into the wood- and straw-fired oven to set it baking again.

Homemade or from the bakery, the only thing that matters for Kabul dentist Mohammad Masi is that bread with "breakfast, lunch and dinner is a must".

"If I don't eat bread, I feel like I haven't eaten anything at all."

T.Shimizu--JT