CHAPATIS
We can't resist a warm chapati with our favourite curry. This traditional Indian side dish is easier than you think and only takes a handful of ingredients
Provided by Member recipe by hbridge
Categories Side dish
Time 25m
Yield Makes 10
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- In a large bowl, stir together the flours and salt. Use a wooden spoon to stir in the olive oil and enough water to make a soft dough that is elastic but not sticky.
- Knead the dough on a lightly floured surface for 5-10 mins until it is smooth. Divide into 10 pieces, or less if you want bigger breads. Roll each piece into a ball. Let rest for a few mins.
- Heat a frying pan over medium heat until hot, and grease lightly. On a lightly floured surface, use a floured rolling pin to roll out the balls of dough until very thin like a tortilla.
- When the pan starts smoking, put a chapati on it. Cook until the underside has brown spots, about 30 seconds, then flip and cook on the other side. Put on a plate and keep warm while you cook the rest of the chapatis.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 121 calories, Fat 3 grams fat, SaturatedFat 0.4 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 20 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 0.3 grams sugar, Fiber 2 grams fiber, Protein 3 grams protein, Sodium 0.5 milligram of sodium
CHAPATI RECIPE
This authentic chapati recipe yields one of the best Indian flatbread that I have tried. This chapati recipe includes a detailed explanation of how to cook it perfectly. There is also a collection of tricks and tips and with a video demonstration.
Provided by KP Kwan
Categories Breakfast
Time 32m
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Combine all the ingredients. Continue kneading for 5 minutes until it is soft and pliable.
- Divide the dough into portions between 40g to 45g each.
- Apply some oil on the top of the dough. Cover it with a damp cloth and let it relax for fifteen to twenty minutes.
- Flour the work surface heavily.
- Flatten the dough with your palm. Dip the dough into some flour and shake off the excess.
- Roll out the dough with the rolling pin to a circle of 15cm/6inches in diameter. (Please refer to the video for demonstration).
- Set the stove to medium-high to heat the tawa.
- Place the chapati on the tawa. When some larger bubbles appear, turn it over to the other side and cook for another half a minute.
- When some brown spots are starting to form at the bottom, flip it over again so that the side with the brown spots is on top.
- Tap to deflate the air to avoid the chapati's contact point with the tawa from burning due to high heat.
- Flip the chapati a few times until you get the desired color and remove it from the tawa.
- Apply a light coating of ghee on the top side.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 96 calories, Carbohydrate 19 grams carbohydrates, Cholesterol 0 milligrams cholesterol, Fat 1 grams fat, Fiber 1 grams fiber, Protein 3 grams protein, SaturatedFat 0 grams saturated fat, ServingSize 1, Sodium 74 grams sodium, Sugar 0 grams sugar, TransFat 0 grams trans fat, UnsaturatedFat 1 grams unsaturated fat
CHAPATI (EAST AFRICAN BREAD)
Adopted from Indian cuisine, chapatis have been a part of East African cuisine for centuries. The East African recipe is slightly different from its Indian counterpart. This bread accompanies African soups and stews well. Preparation is minimal, making this a great choice for cooks that are in a pinch.
Provided by Jamie
Categories Bread Quick Bread Recipes
Time 1h10m
Yield 6
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Mix 2 cups flour and salt together in a bowl. Slowly mix in enough water to make a thick dough. Mix in oil until combined.
- Knead dough on a cool surface for a few minutes, adding a few spoonfuls of flour. Return dough to the bowl, cover with a clean cloth, and let rest for 30 minutes.
- Preheat the oven to 200 degrees F (95 degrees C).
- Heat a skillet or griddle over medium heat.
- Divide dough into orange-sized balls. Flatten into 6-inch circles. Fry in batches in the hot skillet, turning once, until golden brown and spotted, 6 to 8 minutes. Repeat with remaining dough. Keep chapatis warm in the oven.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 181.6 calories, Carbohydrate 32.5 g, Fat 3.4 g, Fiber 1.1 g, Protein 4.4 g, SaturatedFat 0.5 g, Sodium 389.3 mg, Sugar 0.1 g
INDIAN CHAPATI BREAD
A simple but delicious recipe for Indian flatbread. Serve with Indian curry, main dishes, or even use to make sandwich wraps. Enjoy!
Provided by INSHA87
Categories Bread Quick Bread Recipes
Time 30m
Yield 10
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- In a large bowl, stir together the whole wheat flour, all-purpose flour and salt. Use a wooden spoon to stir in the olive oil and enough water to make a soft dough that is elastic but not sticky. Knead the dough on a lightly floured surface until it is smooth. Divide into 10 parts, or less if you want bigger breads. Roll each piece into a ball. Let rest for a few minutes.
- Heat a skillet over medium heat until hot, and grease lightly. On a lightly floured surface, use a floured rolling pin to roll out the balls of dough until very thin like a tortilla. When the pan starts smoking, put a chapati on it. Cook until the underside has brown spots, about 30 seconds, then flip and cook on the other side. Continue with remaining dough.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 110 calories, Carbohydrate 18.2 g, Fat 3 g, Fiber 1.8 g, Protein 2.9 g, SaturatedFat 0.4 g, Sodium 234 mg, Sugar 0.1 g
BASIC CHAPATI RECIPE
This is a quick and easy Indian flat bread recipe, served with a potato curry, these no fat flat breads are amazing!
Provided by Robert in melbourne
Categories Breads
Time 1h15m
Yield 6 Chapati's
Number Of Ingredients 3
Steps:
- Mix flour and salt.
- Make a hole in flour and mix in water, making a dough.
- Knead for five minutes, cover with wet cloth and refrigerate for an hour.
- Heat a flat pan (non stick pans are not good for this as repeated use at high heats with no liquid tends to crack the Teflon) until smoking hot.
- Roll out 1/2 a handful of dough into a flat round shape (3mm thick) and put into pan, cooking for 1 minute either side.
- Once turned press gently with a towel, until brown.
- Repeat and serve!
Nutrition Facts : Sodium 27.4
CHAPATI
Chapati is the world's easiest bread to make and one of the best to eat. A dough is made with flour, salt, and water, then balls of dough are rolled out thin and cooked on a griddle or a skillet. Once you get the hang of making chapatis, you can turn out eight breads for dinner in the time it takes to brew a pot of coffee (well...almost). Chapati, sometimes called roti in the north of India and Pakistan, is quintessential Subcontinent. It's a true staple food (like rice) because it not only feeds and nourishes, but it also tastes good day after day, meal after meal. Some of the best simple meals we have ever had have revolved around chapatis: chapati and dal, chapati and a curry. If you're making chapati for the first time, try to find "atta" flour in a local South Asian grocery. Atta is a special kind of whole wheat flour, made from hard durum wheat that is very finely ground. It's an attractive pale yellow-brown in colour and it makes the best chapatis.Serve to accompany any meal, or for breakfast or a snack. Use to scoop up salsa or to lift pieces of kebab, or wrap around sandwich fillings. Yield: Makes 8 chapatis; for three or fourVARIATIONS: You can include 1 to 2 tablespoons oil or ghee, to make a more tender bread. Add the oil or ghee to the flour and mix it in, before adding warm water; you will need a little less water. You can divide the dough in 12, to make smaller breads which are easier to handle; they'll be about 5 to 6 inches (13 to 15 centimetres) in diameter. You can also cook chapatis in oil or ghee. To do so, place about 1/2 teaspoon oil or ghee on the hot skillet and spread it over the cooking surface, before you lay each bread down to cook.
Provided by Food Network Canada
Categories appetizer,breakfast,brunch,Indian,quick and easy,rice and grain,side,Spring,Summer
Yield 3 servings
Number Of Ingredients 3
Steps:
- If working by hand: In a medium-sized bowl, mix together the salt and the flour. Make a well in the middle and add the warm water. Mix with your hand or with a spoon until you can gather it together into a dough (depending on your flour, you may need a little extra water or a little extra flour to make a kneadable dough). Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and knead for 8 to 10 minutes. If using a food processor: Place the flour and salt in the processor and pulse to blend. With the blades going, slowly pour the water through the feed tube. Leave the machine on for about 15 seconds after a ball of dough forms, then turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead briefly.
- Cover the dough with plastic wrap and let stand for 30 minutes or for up to 12 hours. (The longer the dough stands, the more digestible the breads and the easier they are to shape.)
- Divide the dough into 8 pieces and roll each into a ball under your lightly cupped palm. Place some flour on your work suface, dust your palm with flour, and flatten each ball in the flour, pressing both sides into the flour in turn.
- To shape the breads, work with one piece at a time (leaving the others lightly covered). Working on a lightly floured surface, and without turning the bread over, flatten it with a rolling pin, rolling from the center outward, with light strokes, and rotating the bread slightly between each stroke, until the bread is 7 to 8 inches (17 to 20 centimeters) in diameter. Repeat with the remaining 7 breads, keeping the others loosely covered. Do not stack the rolled out breads; if you don't have enough counter space for the breads, roll out just a few and begin cooking, then roll out the others as the breads are cooking.
- Heat a cast-iron griddle or skillet over medium-high heat. Rub the surface with a well oiled cotton cloth or paper towel. When the griddle is hot, place a chapati top-side down on the griddle.
- Let it cook for only 10 to 15 seconds, then gently flip to the second side. Cook on the second side until small bubbles begin to form, approximately one minute. Turn the chapati back to the first side and finish cooking (another minute approximately). At this stage, a perfect chapati will start to balloon. This process can be helped along by gently pressing on the bread. The bread is hot, so we find the easiest method is to use a small cotton cloth or a paper towel wadded up to protect your finger tips. Gently press down on a large bubble forcing the bubble to extend itself wider.
- If the bread starts to burn on the bottom before it has ballooned, move the bread (with the help of your paper towel) across the skillet, dislodging it from the point at which it is beginning to burn.When you are satisfied with your chapatti, remove it and wrap in a clean towel. Continue to cook the other breads, stacking each as it is finished on top of the others and wrapping it to keep it soft and warm.
QUICK BASIC CHAPATIS/ROTIS
Unleavened vegan stove top Indian flat bread. We really enjoy this with garlicky hummus and an herb salad. I learned to make it from Manjula on YouTube (http://www.manjulaskitchen.com/). If you have chapati flour and are good with a rolling pin, you can whip 4 of these out 15-20 minutes or less because they do not have to rise or rest. With regular flours, 4 will take an hour including 1/2 hour resting time. I am not sure the exact origin because so many peoples claim them as their own. I have seen many good ideas for adding herbs/spices to these on this website that I will be trying... Yummm!
Provided by Kanopolis Kook
Categories Quick Breads
Time 20m
Yield 4 chapatis, 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Heat iron skillet or no-stick skillet on medium flame.
- Sift flour and salt into bowl. (If no sifter, fluff with fork.).
- With a wooden spoon, stir in oil, if using, and 1/4 C water, continue to slowly add water until enough water to form a ball.****.
- Turn onto floured surface. Knead for 20 strokes or until dough is elastic. Use only enough flour to keep dough from sticking.
- Divide dough into 4 golf-ball sized balls.
- Roll each in flour.
- With a rolling pin, roll out one ball into about an 8" thin circle. Keep a pile of flour beside you and dust the dough often but only enough to keep it from sticking.
- When skillet is hot enough to immediately sizzle dry a drop of water, put chapati on.
- When bubbles form on top of chapati (1-3 minutes), look at bottom. If it has a few brown spots, flip it over.
- The second side takes much less time, and when it has a few brown spots, remove the pan from the fire and toss chapati directly on the burner (With a gas stove--leave roti in pan and pan on burner, use spatula to massage roti and it will puff up -- Manjula shows how on YouTube). In a few seconds, it will puff up like a balloon. If it doesn't, the dough was not kneaded/rested long enough or there was too much flour worked inches.
- Remove from heat to plate. (Some people slap the air out first.).
- Brush with oil, if desired, to keep soft.
- Cover with towel to keep warm.
- Repeat with next ball. The second and later chapatis always seem to cook faster than the first.
- Serve warm.
- By your third batch, you'll be fast enough to roll out the next one while one is cooking!
- *chapati flour available at Indian food markets, chapati flour does not need to rest to come out properly, other flours do need to rest.
- **chapati flour substitute: 1/2 C whole wheat plus 1/2 C enriched white flour or 3/4 C, 1/4 C respectively (my favorite). Or 1 C all purpose white flour. If using this, after kneading, lest rest for 30 minutes in a warm place--or up to an hour if in cool place, until when you press your finger into it, it feels elasticky and springs back a little. Refrigerate now or continue with dividing into balls, etc.
- ***you can also make it up as much as 5 days ahead of time and store refrigerated in a ball wrapped in plastic. It's best to remove it from the fridge an hour or 2 before using, but if not, it'll just be a little more difficult to roll out.
- ****For flatbread beginners: If you get too much water, just add some flour. If you're new to this, as soon as all the flour is gathered in little balls go ahead and put it on a pile of flour on your work surface and if necessary work water into it a little at a time. It will not hurt the dough no matter how much you work with it -- it will only make it better because it activates the gluten which is what makes the layers you should see after cooking the chapati if you tear it apart -- if you do not see these after cooking, the dough was not worked long enough. Other than burning them, these are foolproof enough to always be edible!
More about "basic chapati recipes"
CHAPATI (EASY INDIAN FLAT BREAD RECIPE) - RASA MALAYSIA
From rasamalaysia.com
Reviews 142Calories 68 per servingCategory Indian Recipes
- Sieve the flour, add salt to it and mix well. Place the flour in a large bowl and add 3/4 cup of the water. Stir gently with fingers in a circular motion until the flour starts to gather. Add 1-2 tablespoons more flour if the dough looks too sticky. Add more water if it looks too dry and firm.
- Knead the flour until it becomes soft and pliable and doesn't stick to your fingers. You can put a little oil on your hand while kneading the dough to help with kneading. Cover the dough with plastic wrap and let the dough rest for at least 1 hour, at room temperature. You may store the dough in refrigerator. Just thaw to room temperature before using it.
- Once ready to make chapatis, heat the griddle over medium-high heat. Divide the dough into 10-12 equal-sized dough balls. Working on one dough ball at a time. Roll a dough ball in the flour and flatten it a bit with your hands. Transfer the flatten ball to a clean flat surface, roll it with a rolling pin into a 6-7 inch disc. If the dough sticks to the surface, dust the surface with more flour.
- Place the chapati on the hot griddle and cook for 30 seconds or until tiny golden dots appear on the surface, flip over and cook the other side. Flip over again and soon the chapati will start to puff up. Use a folded kitchen towel and press gently on the puffy chapati to push the air to the flatten part of of the chapati. The whole bread should puff up into a round ball.
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