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| 1.: Unleavened flatbreads  Sample Recipe : Chappati Take a cup of whole wheat flour.  Add two pinches of salt. Gradually mix in   half a cup of water and knead to a smooth dough, adding more water if   required. Rest for 30 minutes. Pinch off lemon sized balls, roll into thin   rounds and cook both sides on a hot skillet till brown spots appear all over. | Wheat is the staple food of almost all of   North India. It is eaten in a variety of different ways as listed here.  Unleavened   flatbreads:   This is by far the most popular bread across north India, eaten twice or even   thrice a day. Though unleavened breads made from wheat flour is the most   popular and the easiest to work with, a variety of cereal flours (Maize,   millets, sorghum, even rice), are used across the country to make flatbreads.   Most other flours lack gluten and so cannot be kneaded or rolled out as   easily as wheat flour. They are either mixed in with wheat flour or kneaded   with boiling water. Boiling water partially cooks them into starch and makes   kneading possible. Experiment by mixing various flours with wheat flour to   create your own unleavened flatbreads.  Fried unleavened flatbreads: Though chiefly made   from wholewheat flour, eastern India prefers all purpose flour and the recipe   becomes a luchi. A variety of stuffings can be used to create numerous   ftuffed pooris / luchis. A smaller, thicker version of a Poori called Kachori   is popular in east India. Leavened breads: Fermenting, baking and leavening were   techniques Indian cuisine learnt from Central Asia. Leavened breads are   usually baked in a tandoor. They can be made from all purpose flour ( Naan)   or from whole wheat flour ( Tandoori Roti). A kind of sour dough bread which   is yeast leavened ( Khameeri roti) is also cooked in a Tandoor. When the   leavened all purpose dough is cooked on a skillet, it is called a Kulcha.   Leavened breads can also be deep fried ( Bhatura / Badshahi naan). They can   also be stuffed with a variety of additives and baked (stuffed naan) or   cooked on a skillet ( stuffed kulcha)..  Layered / stuffed unleavened flatbreads: Indian cuisine   discovered that a thick flatbread can be made edible without leavening by   stuffing it or layering it like a puff pastry. With this discovery arose a   huge range of stuffed parathas and layered parathas. Layered parathas are   popular across the country. In the south they are called parota and are made   from all purpose flour. In some places these are deep fried to make a crumbly,   flaky bread.  Crepes Thin crepes from a wheat   flour batter (whole wheat flour or all purpose flour) are eaten in south   India as a kind of dosa and in Orissa as chakuli. It is usually eaten with a   variety of chutneys. A variety of flours like rice flour, semolina can be   mixed in to produce a range of different crepes. Wheat   grit porridge : Wheat   grits / semolina is cooked as the popular Upma in south. A sweet version   called sooji Halwa is popular in the north as a dessert Shopping List 1kg : Whole wheat flour ( atta), all purpose flour ( maida), Oil 250 gms : Salt, ghee, butter, paneer, yogurt 100 gms : Chili powder, baking powder, cashew, raisins. | 
| 2.: Fried unleavened flatbreads Sample Recipe: Poori: Prepare the dough and roll out   thin circles as above. Heat two cups oil. Slide the dough round and deep fry   both sides till puffed and golden. Drain oil and serve.  | |
| 3.: Layered flatbreads  Sample Recipe : Lachcha paratha   Knead dough as in recipe #1. Pinch off a   tomato sized ball and roll out into a large thin sheet. Smear liberally with   ghee. Cut up the sheet with a pizza cutter into 10-12 pieces. Stack the   pieces over one another. Flatten with hand and press gently into a thick   round. Cook both sides on a hot skillet over medium flame drizzling with   butter/ ghee. Once ready, place the edges of your hands on either side of the   paratha. Bring them sharply together, crushing it and separating the layers. | |
| 4.: Stuffed unleavened flatbreads  Sample Recipe : Paneer Paratha Prepare dough as in recipe #1. Take a   handful of grated paneer. Mix in two pinches each of salt & chili powder.   Shape into lemon sized balls. Pinch off a tomato sized ball of dough and roll   out into a disc. Place a ball of stuffing in the center. Gather the edges of   the dough together, enclosing the stuffing. Flatten with palm and roll gently   into a thick disc. Cook both sides on a hot skillet liberally using butter /   ghee.  | |
| 5.: Leavened flatbreads  . Sample Recipe : Naan  Take a cup of maida ( all purpose   flour). Mix in two pinches each of salt, baking powder and half a cup of   yogurt. Add water if needed and knead well. Rest for 10 minutes. Pinch off a   tomato sized ball and roll into ovals. Bake in an electric tandoor / tandoor   / very hot oven till brown spots appear.  | |
| 6.:   Stuffed leavened flatbreads Sample Recipe : Peshawari   Naan   Blend half a handful   of cashew and raisins to a thick paste.. Make dough as above #5).  Pinch off a tomato sized ball. Shape into a   cup. Add a lemon sized ball of  cashew   –raisin paste. Seal in the stuffing, flatten gently with hand and roll into   thick ovals. Bake in an electric tandoor / hot oven  till brown spots appear.  | |
| 7.:    Skillet   cooked leavened flatbreads Sample Recipe : Kulcha Prepare dough as in   recipe #5. Pinch off a tomato sized ball of dough and roll out into a thick disc.   Cook both sides on a hot skillet over medium flame till brown spots appear   all over. | |
| 8.:.    Fried   leavened flatbreads Sample Recipe: Bhatura Prepare dough as in   recipe #5. Pinch off tomato sized balls and roll into large thin rounds. Heat   three cups of oil in a wide and deep pan. Slide in dough sheet and deep fry till   puffed and golden. | |
| 9.:   Crepes Sample Recipe : Wheat flour Dosa. Take a cup of whole   wheat flour / all purpose flour. Mix with a cup of water to a soup like   batter. Add more water if needed. Mix in two pinches of salt and baking   powder. Heat a non stick skillet. Pour a ladle of batter and spread into a   thick / thin round. Cook on medium flame till bubbles appear on top. Flip and   cook the other side. | |
| 10.: Regional specialties Sample Recipe: Bati: Take a cup of wheat flour, two   pinches of cumin, two pinches of salt and a spoon of ghee. Mix in half a cup   of water and knead to a stiff dough. Let rest for an hour. Pinch of tomato   sized balls, flatten them slightly and bake in a hot oven (200 c) for 10   minute still they brown. Flip them and bake them for 10 minutes more till   they brown all over. Let cool. Crush them till the crust breaks, dip in ghee   and serve. (Rajasthan).
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Sunday, January 10, 2010
10 ways of eating wheat in India
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Blog Archive
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2010
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January
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- Indian Cuisine - A Primer
- Karnataka Curry Families - A Primer
- Andhra Curry Families - A Primer
- Tamilnadu Curry Families
- 10 ways of eating wheat in India
- Pan Indian Curries Cheatsheet
- Building blocks of Indian Curries - The Additives
- Building blocks of Indian Curries - The Flavouring
- 10 ways of eating rice in India
- Building blocks of Indian Curries - The base
 
 
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January
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