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Tag Archives: flatbread

Guyanese roti

11 Friday Jul 2014

Posted by Zoli in bread, comfort food, flatbread, Guyanese, kids, roti

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

flatbread, Guyanese roti, roti

roti

My neighbor and friend brought over some roti and vegetable curry she’d made to one of our parties and I’ve been thinking about it ever since. Not just because it was getting a bit late and all the hot food had been gobbled up by hungry guests when suddenly this aromatic chickpea and potato curry appeared along with soft, flaky, delicious roti to save the night, but also because it was new to me. I’d never had this style of roti before—large, thin, supple flatbread that looks as fragile as a pastry crust but actually needs a bit of effort to tear off a piece and then is delightfully buttery and chewy to eat.

I didn’t get my friend’s recipe yet, but I found this on Metemgee’s cool blog and it turned out great. Watch her awesome youtube video as well. Serve with curry or any kind of side dish (such as okra or spinach) you like. I thought it was delicious with a spicy tomato salsa as a quick snack too.

Ingredients for 3 large roti
adapted from metemgee.com
2 cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 tsp unsalted butter
1 cup water

oil baste
2 tsp melted butter
1/2 cup olive oil

1) In a large bowl, sift all the dry ingredients together. Cut in the butter with your fingers and mix.
2) Make a well in the center, pour in the water and get stuck in with your hands. This is gooey and sticky—just a mess. Enjoy it. Probably take your rings off. Push your fingers right in and squeeze the dough like a toddler with clay. After a few minutes, the dough should become a little less sticky and supple. Pat a little olive oil on it to keep it from sticking to the bowl.
3) Cover with a damp paper towel and leave for 30 minutes to an hour. I waited an hour.
4) The dough should now be wonderfully soft and smooth. Sprinkle flour on a work surface, divide the dough into three pieces (or four if you do not have a large frying pan).
5) Using flour to help with stickiness, roll out the first chunks of dough into a very thin, flat circle.
6) Use a pastry brush to brush the melted butter/olive oil mixture lightly over the flattened dough.
7) Starting from the center of the dough, cut a straight line out to the edge and fold a little bit of the dough over onto itself to make a small triangle. Keep rolling it around until you have completely rolled the dough into a fat cone shape.
8) Pick up the cone shape, fat end upwards and poke it into itself so that none of the oily edges are left (if this sounds confusing, watch her video!). Flip the dough over so that the pointy side is now up and then gently push the pointy end into itself. You should now have a chubby round ball of dough. This method ensures that there are layers of buttery oil in the roti—sort of like a puff pastry.
9) Roll this dough out carefully so that the center stays the center and the oil layers spread out evenly in the dough. Roll it out as thin as you can (or as big as your frying pan can accommodate).
10) Heat up a frying pan on high heat. Do not oil it. Place the rolled out roti dough on the frying pan and let cook about a minute, or until you begin to see air pockets form. Flip the roti and brush more oil/butter mixture on it. Let cook another minute and flip again. Brush the oil mixture on this side. You can flip the roti again if it needs a little more cooking time on each side. It is done when both sides are golden brown like a cooked tortilla.
11) Place the hot roti on a paper towel and fold over once into a half circle. Now you need to ‘clap’ it to make it flaky. Sure this is freakin’ hot flatbread you’re about to pick up with your bare hands, but no one said cooking was easy. Quickly pick up the half circle of roti and clap it together fairly hard a few times. I tend to toss the roti slightly and clap it as quickly as I can to minimize the scorching. Clap the bread until it is nice and flaky, then fold over and repeat to fry the other two rotis.

resting roti dough

cutting the roti dough

rolling into cone shape

push down the cone shape

basting one side of roti

roti in frying pan
roti

roti

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Homemade flour tortillas

19 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Zoli in bread, flatbread, healthy, kids, kids lunchbox ideas, Mexican, quick and awesome, Street food, tacos, tex mex, the basics, vegan, Vegetarian

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

flatbread, flour tortillas, homemade tortillas, tortillas de harina, white flour

homemade tortillas 3

homemade tortillas 2

We’re all brainwashed in various ways until some stimulus comes along and opens our eyes. Sometimes we fight change and sometimes a lightbulb just turns on above our heads.
I make an Indian-style dinner about once a week and usually include a homemade bread such as naan, chapatis or puris. I plan the kneading, rolling out and frying into my mealtime cooking and it’s never any trouble. So why then have I only been making tacos when I have tortillas from Trader Joes? Tortillas are just as easy to make as chapatis. I’d just never thought of making them by hand before. And now I feel like a dunce. But no time like the present to break a bad habit. Also check out the strangely lengthy ingredient list on a store-bought packet of tortillas. Especially those El Paso brand ones. Yuck.
I tried a few recipes before I landed on this one. Simple, tasty and easy to make—especially if you’re not precious about perfect circles. Sure a tortilla press would be handy but once you get into the rhythm of rolling out and frying it’s kind of fun (especially with good music or a cool podcast to listen to).

Ingredients
makes about 12 flour tortillas
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/4 or 1 1/2 cup hot water
1/4 cup olive oil
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
pinch of salt

1) Mix the flour with the baking powder and salt.
2) Pour in the olive oil and mix with your fingers until the flour has a crumbly texture. This is the fun part. The flour feels velvety soft.
3) Add in the water (I heated up water in a kettle and poured it in after it boiled). Start with 1 and 1/4 cups and add in another 1/4 cup if you need it.
4) Mix the dough until it comes together and then dump onto a floured work surfaced and knead for a few minutes.
5) Pinch off pieces of dough and roll into about 12 dough balls. Flatten them slightly with your fingers (not your palm) so they are like little thick discs. Cover with kitchen towel or tea towel so they don’t dry out and leave to rest for 15 minutes.
6) To cook, heat up a cast iron skillet if you have one or a heavy bottomed frying pan like me. Roll a dough ball out as thin as you can (paper thin) and as evenly circular as you can. I find that roll, turn, roll, turn, etc. works well.
7) Place the thin tortilla in the hot frying pan (no need to oil the pan) and push down gently on any big air bubbles. Cook for about 30 seconds, then flip over and cook the other side. Flip again and cook the first side a little more if you need to. Place the cooked tortilla under a tea towel so that it stays soft and doesn’t get dried out.
8) While it is cooking, start rolling out the second tortilla. Continue piling the cooked tortillas under a tea towel.
9) Serve straightaway or store in a ziploc bag when they have cooled down. Reheat gently in a frying pan just as you would store-bought tortillas.

making tortillas 1
making tortillas 2
tortilla dough
tortilla dough balls
rolling out tortillas
frying tortillas
first tortilla cooked
homemade tortillas 1

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