I like my butt rubbed and my pork pulled.
Member since 2009
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The relentless naan thread ( long)
Comments
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I went to school near Delhi and grew up in Kolkata for a while. Mom was Punjabi, Dad is Bengali, so we grew up eating Punjabi/Northern Indian and Bengali food.Toxarch said:Out of curiosity, can I ask what part of India you or your ancestors are from? I assume somewhere in North India since you are after the perfect Naan. I was born in Texas and my parents are from Karnataka. It's mostly chapati in the South, but I do enjoy a good Naan. I wondered if you have tried any Indian flours rather than bread or AP flours.
And I can't believe I didn't think about using maida! Where's that facepalm emoji?? I'll try that. Most recipes equate it to bread flour, but I'm not sure that is entirely accurate.
Thanks for the tip!#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
caliking said:
I remember your setup. It gets the naan high in the dome, but the naan doesn't see the fire.Little Steven said:Two platesetters did the trick for me.
I might let that one slip by though. Just because its you.
It sees the flame wrapping around the dome. When I said hot as you can get it...I meant exactly that.Steve
Caledon, ON
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caliking said:And I can't believe I didn't think about using maida! Where's that facepalm emoji?? I'll try that. Most recipes equate it to bread flour, but I'm not sure that is entirely accurate.
@caliking .. I thought maida was nothing but All Purpose flour. I have made Naans on my BGE before, but often given up as I can get better Naans from the frozen section of the Indian Grocery store (Haldirams, kawan etc.) I am definitely going to try your recipe on my Weber KettlePizza as that approximates a wood fired pizza oven and the dough can certainly "see the fire".LBGE & MiniOrlando, FL -
Awesome job on the recipe. I've had great naan only at one local restaurant, long gone now. So I'm anxious to give your method a try at home.
One question: One of your steps is this:
- On a well floured surface, roll out the naans, ~1/16" thick. Dock the naan with a sharp knife.
Not sure exactly what you mean by "docking" the naan.Cincinnati, Ohio. Large BGE since 2011. Still learning. -
They kind of look alike to the untrained eye. I think you should get both and act like "I told you I was getting that" if she asks. Works for me.caliking said:
Dude... have mercy. I already have a KBQ on the grey list.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:Dangit. Was really hoping to cost you some forum dollars here.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
The Cen-Tex Smoker said:
They kind of look alike to the untrained eye. I think you should get both and act like "I told you I was getting that" if she asks. Works for me.caliking said:
Dude... have mercy. I already have a KBQ on the grey list.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:Dangit. Was really hoping to cost you some forum dollars here.
#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
I did not read any of the comments. I have spent a lot of time in the Middle East. A whole lot. Eaten a lot of butter chicken with naan bread. Oh man I do miss it. Just buy the store bought stuff heat it in the egg and call it good.VA Beach
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Go back and read the comments and the starting post. You'll realize that throwing a store-bought naan on the egg is not an optionVB_egger said:I did not read any of the comments. I have spent a lot of time in the Middle East. A whole lot. Eaten a lot of butter chicken with naan bread. Oh man I do miss it. Just buy the store bought stuff heat it in the egg and call it good.
#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
Docking means making a bunch of holes in the rolled out dough to keep it from ballooning up while it bakes. Keeps it relatively flat, but still bubbly in spots. I took a paring knife and just stabbed the naan with the tip to make very small slits.OhioEgger said:Awesome job on the recipe. I've had great naan only at one local restaurant, long gone now. So I'm anxious to give your method a try at home.
One question: One of your steps is this:
- On a well floured surface, roll out the naans, ~1/16" thick. Dock the naan with a sharp knife.
Not sure exactly what you mean by "docking" the naan.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
Not the same thing. Thats the equivalent of looking over your shoulder to see something behind you.Little Steven said:caliking said:
I remember your setup. It gets the naan high in the dome, but the naan doesn't see the fire.Little Steven said:Two platesetters did the trick for me.
I might let that one slip by though. Just because its you.
It sees the flame wrapping around the dome. When I said hot as you can get it...I meant exactly that.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
That's how I had the best results on the Egg. It works surprisingly well. That being said, the range in my kitchen has an infrared broiler element. That combined with a pizza stone does a decent job.... pretty close to the real texture. Maybe a mix of bread and cake flour?caliking said:
That may be worth trying. Provided the dough doesn't fall through the grid. Thanks.blind99 said:Very nice write up. You may have a second career writing recipes!
i wonder how it would turn out if you put it right on the grill above the coals, maybe with the hit platesetter write on top of it? (Not crushing it, just feet down, on the grill)____________________Entrepreneurs are simply those who understand that there is little difference between obstacle and opportunity and are able to turn both to their advantage. •Niccolo Machiavelli -
I think the Serious Eats recipe had tried cake flour and the texture was off. Even their final version was quite off the mark IMO.paqman said:That's how I had the best results on the Egg. It works surprisingly well. That being said, the range in my kitchen has an infrared broiler element. That combined with a pizza stone does a decent job.... pretty close to the real texture. Maybe a mix of bread and cake flour?
How hot does your IR broiler get? I wish mine went higher than 500 before locking up the oven.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
I tried the Relentless Naan recipe last night with very good relults. It was an impulse decision, so I didn't think I had time for the sourdough approach set forth in Relentless Naan II - Naansanity Reigns (http://eggheadforum.com/discussion/1205398/the-relentless-naan-thread-part-2-also-long-but-i-think-i-nailed-it).
Three notes:- I was advised that the temp in this version is too hot, and closer to 450F is better
- I replaced the bread flour with Tipo 00, because I am swimming in the stuff - Highly recommended
- I now almost never use my MM, and have though of selling it. However, it is awesome for a tailgate naan operation, and that alone will keep it in the stable
Next time, I am going to try RNII, and use my fancy pizza flour on that
Final note - baingan bharta done by roasting the eggplant on the BGE is a winner
(sorry for no pics - the masses were hungry, as was I)
(now only 16 stone)
Joule SV
GE induction stove
Gasser by the community pool (currently unavailable)
Scale (which one of my friends refuses to use)
Friends with BGEs and myriad other fired devices (currently unavail IRL)
Occasional access to a KBQ and Webber Kettle
Charcuterie and sourdough enthusiast
Prosciuttos in an undisclosed locationAustin, TX -
The RNII thread supersedes this one, so that's the one to follow in the future.
But think you're on to something with the 00. The naan texture was really quite good. Better than what I got at the time, following the same recipe and protocol.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX. -
Thread rehash; I'd like to give this a go. My primary reason for finding this thread was to see if anyone has made Baingan Bharta. Search results came up empty, so someday I'll smoke some eggplant and make it.
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I make similar. I smoke aubergine slices then fry in oil (once smoked / dried out, they fry quickly and absorb a lot less oil) and add to a tomato based curry sauce.500 said:Thread rehash; I'd like to give this a go. My primary reason for finding this thread was to see if anyone has made Baingan Bharta. Search results came up empty, so someday I'll smoke some eggplant and make it. -
Usually, baingan bharta calls for the eggplant to be roasted/charred over flame. I was never a fan of it as a kid. Probably would have been a different story, if I had grown up eating a version of it that called for smoked eggplant.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX.
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Smoked then fried is excellent.caliking said:Usually, baingan bharta calls for the eggplant to be roasted/charred over flame. I was never a fan of it as a kid. Probably would have been a different story, if I had grown up eating a version of it that called for smoked eggplant. -
https://www.cookwithmanali.com/baingan-bharta/This is the Baingan Bharta recipe I found. I was thinking of smoke/roasting the eggplant at like 300*~325* until it’s soft, then finishing the dish inside, and then at the end grilling the naan on the pizza stone. Not sure how either of these two dishes will work, as I’ve never made either, but Mrs. 500 only orders Baingan Bharta when we get get Indian carryout.I like my butt rubbed and my pork pulled.
Member since 2009 -
Chapatis are good on the Egg too. Direct on a hot fire.500 said:https://www.cookwithmanali.com/baingan-bharta/This is the Baingan Bharta recipe I found. I was thinking of smoke/roasting the eggplant at like 300*~325* until it’s soft, then finishing the dish inside, and then at the end grilling the naan on the pizza stone. Not sure how either of these two dishes will work, as I’ve never made either, but Mrs. 500 only orders Baingan Bharta when we get get Indian carryout. -
Yep. Chapatis/rotis very much benefit from the direct flame treatment.Eoin said:
Chapatis are good on the Egg too. Direct on a hot fire.500 said:https://www.cookwithmanali.com/baingan-bharta/This is the Baingan Bharta recipe I found. I was thinking of smoke/roasting the eggplant at like 300*~325* until it’s soft, then finishing the dish inside, and then at the end grilling the naan on the pizza stone. Not sure how either of these two dishes will work, as I’ve never made either, but Mrs. 500 only orders Baingan Bharta when we get get Indian carryout.#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX.
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