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Dough! Lighten up! "Prove it" was supposed to be a pun and a joke UB! :
I tried these tonight - minus the yeast. I also added a tsp of kalonji seeds.
Quote from: Tamala on April 27, 2008, 08:55 AMDough! Lighten up! "Prove it" was supposed to be a pun and a joke UB! :I got it! ;D and the other two!
Tamala,this is one that needs trying out to appreciate what's happening.i must admit i was very sceptical (as you point out it's not conventional at all in terms of bread making) but now i am totally sold.i'm no master baker (of course) but i make pizza dough and bread all the time. i know that kneading is very important but we (home cooks) have to accept we've not got the equipment and therefore need to improvise somehow.what i do know is that with this recipe there is no need (sorry pun - i did like yours so could not resist) to knead. the high proportion of water has the effect of making the finished "bread" very soft. it also makes it very very sticky.what mr clever (UB) has stumbled on is a way of dealing with the stickiness and get a top notch product - hence the pat a cake trick and throw the rolling pin away.i too got very ugly (the dough only wants to stretch in 1 direction making the thing long and narrow not pear shape) shapes but the family were totally sold on the taste (much better than the KD recipe).during the "throwing" of the naan from hand to hand i added a sprinkling of extra flour to keep the surface from sticking - the aim is to keep the inside volume wet/sticky but the outside floured just enough for the pat a cake trick to work.as UB says we now just need to develop our pat a cake skills.
Let me clarify my experience with the stickiness. The dough itself in the bowl is very sticky, yes....From that perspective, I'd say these are quite BIR.