PESHAWARI NAAN BREAD (BREAD MACHINE)
A traditional Indian bread from Peshawar. I have used ingredients easily available in UK, together with British measurements.
Provided by Old Baker
Categories Breads
Time 2h10m
Yield 6 naans, 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Add all ingredients (except the sultanas) to your bread machine in the order your machine recommends. If your machine recommends pre-heated liquids, just heat the skimmed milk till it's lukewarm.
- Start your machine on the dough setting.
- 10-15 minutes before your machine stops mixing and starts proving, (some machines beep at this point) add the sultanas.
- Preheat your oven to 250C and have 3 shelves in it.
- Grease 3 flat oven trays.
- When the bread machine has finished, tip out the dough onto a floured board.
- Tear off a chunk of dough about 1 sixth of the total size and flatten out with the hands to a pear shape about half the size of your tray. Do not use a roller as the bread probably won't rise. Repeat till you have 6 naans on your trays.
- Bake in the oven for about 7 minutes, or until the bread just begins to colour.
- The bread can be frozen in bags for later use.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 550, Fat 17.2, SaturatedFat 7.3, Cholesterol 37.4, Sodium 486.7, Carbohydrate 87.3, Fiber 3.6, Sugar 23.5, Protein 12.6
PESHWARI NAANS
My take on the Peshawari naan.
Provided by CrawfordGuyDixon
Time 1h10m
Yield Makes 6-8
Number Of Ingredients 0
Steps:
- Put 125ml warm water into a bowl and sprinkle over the yeast and 1 tsp of the sugar. Leave for 10-15 mins or until frothy. In a larger bowl put the flour, remaining sugar, ½ tsp salt and baking powder. Mix together then make a well in the centre in which to pour the melted butter, yogurt, nigella seeds and yeast mixture. Stir well, then start to bring the mixture together with your hands. If it's very wet add a spoonful of flour but if it's dry add a splash more warm water. It should be a very soft dough but not so wet that it won't come together into a ball of dough. When you're happy with the consistency, start kneading, first in the bowl then transfer the mixture onto a well floured surface and continue to knead for 10 minutes or until smooth and elastic but still soft. Grease a large bowl with extra melted butter or ghee then shape the dough into a ball and place in the prepared bowl. Cover and leave in a warm place for about 1 hr or until doubled in size.
- For the Peshwari paste, in a food processor, blend the almond flakes, cream, desiccated coconut, sugar and sultanas until they form a thick paste. You may need to adjust the recipe by adding more cream to form the paste if it is too crumbly or more almond flakes if too wet.
- Kneed the peshwari paste into a pliable dough.
- Now take a tennis ball sized ball of the naan dough and make a shallow hole in it with your thumb.
- Place the peshwari paste dough into it and then fold the naan dough around the peshwari paste.
- Heat a large non-stick frying pan over a high heat. Take one of the balls of dough and roll it out to form a teardrop shape that's approximately 21cm long and around 13cm at the widest part. When the pan is very hot, carefully lay the naan bread into it. Let it dry fry and puff up for about 3 mins, then turn over and cook on the other side for another 3-4 mins or until cooked through and charred in patches. Heat oven to its lowest setting and put the cooked naan bread on a baking sheet. Brush with a little melted butter and put it on the baking sheet and cover with foil. Keep warm in the oven and layer up the cooked naans one on top of each other as you make them, brushing each one with melted butter or ghee as you go.
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