this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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I'm working on making decent naan at home. My Indian coworkers are trying to help. It was better the second day after fermenting overnight. I hope that bread flour and a new recipe will improve it even more.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Ok...several people have asked. The recipe that I used is not good. I'm still working on it. I promise that when I get it right I will post it here for everyone to try.

I used the recipe from this video. I'm not suggesting that the recipe is bad but it did not produce what I wanted which was light, stretchy, chewy naan bread like you get in a restaurant.

In discussing my progress with my Indian coworkers I know that I'm never going to get restaurant tandoor quality naan at home but what I want is to get something better than the dry, stale fake naan that I can buy at my local grocery store.

So...I'm going to try again, this time using 2/3 bread flour (I used all purpose with baking powder, salt, and baking soda to approximate self-rising flour) and 1/3 whole wheat flour. I also bought a bag of nigella seeds...

The pan that I used was a 10" round griddle pan.

It approximates a tawa (or tava depending on how you pronounce it) which is like a small, very shallow upside down wok.

I made up the dough, kneaded it aggressively (I'm a 115 kg farmer and I was sweating in the end) for 15 minutes. I'm talking a two handed, left right knead for 15 straight minutes. I then allowed the dough to ferment at room temperature for 6 hours and cooked half of it. It was not good. I then let if ferment for another 6 hours at room temperature then put it in the fridge overnight and took it out the next afternoon. It was markedly better but still not great.

The process is you divide the dough up into approximately 120 g balls. Let it rest, then put the pan on a high flame (or the highest your stove will go) and heat it up screeching hot, like steak searing hot. Roll your dough out to around 25 cm in diameter, oil the top then flip it over and wet the other side. Rub the water around. You want it to be wet and sticky. Now slap it onto the pan water side down. It will start to bubble up within seconds. Once you have a nice crop of bubbles pick the pan up, turn it over, and hold the oiled side about 15 cm above the flame and move it around in a circular motion. This will obviously not work for a non-stick pan. Once the bubbles are nice and brown set the pan down, use a spatula to unstick it from the pan, and give it a healthy buttering on the bubble side. Pan back on the flame, roll, oil, water, slap, bubbles, invert, brown bubbles, spatula, butter, repeat.

The one that I made this evening after more than 24 hours of fermenting was more chewy. I hope very much that switching to bread flour from all purpose will help. I also plan to let it ferment at room temperature for 24 hours. This is not for the faint of heart given that it has raw eggs in it but I know the chickens that lay them.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I have the ingredients and the similar pan. I will try it this weekend.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks for sharing, wasn't aware you can use a tawa (or similar) to approximate a tandoor. Will give that a go one day!