Berber Pizza: The Flatbread Baked in the Sand of the Sahara
It is called Berber pizza by tourists and melloui or khobz el-malla by the people who actually make it. The name is imprecise — it is not pizza in any Italian sense — but the description captures something real: a thick, round, dough-filled flatbread cooked directly in the hot desert sand and ash, producing a crust unlike anything achieved by any oven. If you eat one between Merzouga and Rissani, baked in the ground beside a fire while you drink mint tea, you will not find a better version anywhere else in Morocco. Or possibly anywhere.
What it isWhat Is Berber Pizza?
Berber pizza is a thick stuffed flatbread — typically round, 30 to 40 cm in diameter — made from a simple semolina and white flour dough, filled with a mixture of minced meat, onion, and spices (cumin, paprika, salt, sometimes herbs), sealed by folding the dough over the filling and pressing the edges closed. The sealed disc is then placed directly onto hot embers and ash, covered with more hot ash and embers, and left to cook for 15 to 20 minutes.
The cooking method is what makes it distinct. The combination of intense dry heat from the ash above and below, the slight smokiness from the embers, and the insulating effect of the sand around the fire creates a crust that is simultaneously very crisp on the outside and completely soft within. The interior, when you break it open, steams. The filling cooks by the heat conducted through the dough rather than direct flame — the result is moist, juicy, and deeply flavoured in a way that baking in any conventional oven does not replicate.
The “pizza” comparison comes from the visual similarity when it is broken open and the filling is spread across the surface for serving. It is eaten by tearing pieces of the bread and using them to scoop the filling — in exactly the way you would use bread with any Moroccan dish rather than a fork. No plates. No cutlery. Hands, bread, fire, sand.
How it is made
How Berber Pizza Is Made in the Desert
A proper Berber pizza requires hot embers, not flames. The fire needs to be started at least 45 minutes before cooking so that the wood has burned down to grey ash and glowing coals. Desert communities typically keep a fire going through the morning for tea and cook Berber pizza as the midday meal when the embers are at their best.
Semolina, white flour, salt, water, and a small amount of yeast or baking powder, worked into a smooth pliable dough and left to rest under a cloth for 20 to 30 minutes. The dough should be soft enough to press flat without cracking but firm enough to hold the filling when sealed. This is not a leavened bread that rises significantly — the dough stays relatively flat and dense.
Minced lamb or beef with diced onion, cumin, salt, paprika, and fresh coriander or parsley. Some versions add a small amount of olive oil to the filling mix. The filling should be moist but not wet — too much liquid will make the dough soggy before it cooks through.
The dough is pressed into a round disc, the filling is placed in the centre, and the edges are folded up and sealed by pressing the dough firmly together around the circumference. The sealed disc is pressed flat again with the palm of the hand. The seam should be well crimped — if it opens during cooking the filling falls into the ash.
The fire embers are raked flat. The disc goes onto the embers and is immediately covered with hot ash from around the fire, then more embers on top. The bread cooks from both sides simultaneously under its ash casing. After 8 to 10 minutes it is uncovered, turned with two sticks or a shovel, re-buried, and cooked for another 8 to 10 minutes.
The cooked bread is pulled from the fire with sticks and any remaining ash is brushed off with a dry cloth or a bundle of dried grass. The exterior is dark — almost blackened in places — which is correct and not burnt. The crust underneath that darkness is dry, crisp, and slightly smoky.
The bread is broken open at the table — steam escapes, the filling spreads across the interior surface. Argan oil or olive oil is drizzled across the filling. Eat immediately while it is hot, tearing pieces of the crust to scoop the filling. Mint tea alongside.
My mother made this every Friday for the family when I was growing up in Merzouga. The fire was started in the morning. By the time we came home from the mosque the embers were ready. It tastes different from any other bread because nothing else touches it except heat and ash. That is the whole method.Hassan, founder of Pro Morocco Tours — born in Merzouga
Where to Eat Berber Pizza
The best Berber pizza is not in a restaurant — it is made at home or at a desert camp fire. If your Morocco desert tour guide knows a family in the Merzouga or Rissani area who makes it, asking to join for lunch is the correct approach. At the desert camp, some camps prepare it as an alternative breakfast or lunch option on the free desert day — ask in advance when you book. A few restaurants in Merzouga and Rissani serve a skillet version that is cooked in a pan rather than the sand — this is decent food but a different thing entirely from the sand-baked original.
Eat Berber Pizza in the Sahara
Tell us you want Berber pizza on your desert tour and we will make it happen — either at the camp or at a family lunch near Merzouga. It is not on any menu. It has to be arranged in advance.
Plan Your Morocco Desert Tour