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One alternative way to cook these as I do is get a grill really hot, then heat up the tava until it is stupidly hot on a gas ring, slap the bread on the tava and put it under the grill
Background:This is my recipe for naan bread. It produces light, supple and tasty naans, without the use of a tandoor. It involves cooking the naans on a very hot ?Tava? (i.e. flat, side-less, pan). Although they are not as good as those cooked in a restaurant tandoor, this method, nevertheless, produces perfectly acceptable home-cooked naans.2. I?m not particularly fond of the sour taste of yeast and I therefore do not use it. The dough, therefore, does not need proving and it will not rise appreciably. I think it is also highly unlikely that BIRs use yeast either.6. I highly recommend brushing the naans with melted butter ghee (i.e. clarified butter) in Step 16. It imparts a particularly nice flavour, yellow colouring and a crispness to the surface of the naan
They shrink on the tava, don't they?
I brush the naans with veg oilThat's how the takeaways round here do it
I used to use ghee but find it's got a bit of a unappetising smell when cold
One by one they magically dissapear!!
Doh! ;D