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Would the heat gun not produce a similar result if held closer?
Naans for me are the final frontier. I can recreate everything in my normal takeaway order perfectly apart from the naans. I agree that as with most Indian cooking the method is more important than the recipe. I just don't know if it's possible to recreate at home. I doubt BIR's would spend thousands of pounds on tandoors if they could get the same result with a tawa and a grill or blowtorch.It's not going to stop me trying though. As I see it there are two key elements, a very hot ceramic surface to stick it to, and very hot dry convection based heat on the outside. I don't think a gas BBQ could manage the searing heat needed but a charcoal one could. I have a few ideas to try if we get come more nice weather!
Just had a thought about making naans without a tandoor. If there's any budding DIYers out there who happen to have a clay chiminea kicking around the garden years on end doing nothing and getting wet. . . . How about cutting the chimney in half lengthways. You could then re-attach with a pair of hinges and a catch. Should be enough room to cook two or more naans at a time. Not sure of the temps or how close to the heat source they'd be but seems the closest you could get to a real tandoori oven without the expense or building your own from scratch.
Hi Phil, its basically a pot belly fire with a chinmey on top.[image snipped]You could just go through the top and slap the naan in, but most are a bit too narrow for comfort this way.I was thinking along the lines of taking an angle grinder or an appropriate saw and cutting lengthways to create a half pipe. then reassemble with hinges and a catch so that one half opens like a door.A similar principle to the door on smokers only vertical.[image snipped]Frank.