Naan bread is a problem! I do not have a tandoor, a pizza stone or hot grill (nor a proper oven for that matter), so I have only a gas hob to work with. Given that, I am quite pleased with the results I get, and never have any bread leftover when I cook for friends or paying customers.
The dough recipe I use is as follows and was found on this site (I think) but I can't find it. If anyone knows where it is then please post a link.
480g plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
200ml water
30ml oil
45ml milk
1/4 tsp bicarb
1tsp salt
2tsp sugar
5tsp yoghurt
1tsp dried yeast (optional)
butter / ghee for brushing (optional)
Sieve the flour, salt, bicarb, baking powder, yeast into a large bowl.
Whisk yoghurt, sugar and milk
Make a well in the flour and add the liquids (water and whisked milk), mixing until everything is combined into a smooth dough. Leave for 10 minutes.
Turn the dough onto a suitable flat surface and add the oil. Knead until the oil is
absorbed and the dough is smooth and elastic. Leave for a couple of hours in a
warm place. The resulting dough will be quite a bit wetter than normal bread dough
but with a bit of practice it is not hard to handle.
Divide the dough into balls, and using oiled hands manipulate into flat naan shapes (or shaped to fit the pan!). The dough has to be quite thin using my cooking method
because the steel pan gets really hot and can burn the naan before it cooks through.
Very lightly oil the pan and heat, but reduce the flame before adding the dough. Cook
until blisters start to appear on the top surface, checking that the underside has
coloured nicely, then turn over. Cook for another minute or two. Brush with butter or
ghee if desired, and serve.
The dough can be frozen or stored in the fridge for a couple of days.
Because I rely on a gas hob I use a steel pan which would normally be for paella.
I have a tava waiting to be brought over from England which may work better.
I find that this method does produce tasty, soft and authentic smelling bread. Not
quite a true naan; the blisters get broken when the bread is turned for example, but
pretty good given the limited facilities available to me.
This photo shows a (very small) portion of chicken jalfrezi (CA's recipe), mint raita,
naan and pilau.
