Garlic Naan - Easy Garlic Flatbread - Food Wishes

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hello this is chef john from food wishes comm with garlic none that's right we posted a lot of flat breads on the channel like pita bread flour tortillas mountain bread and i'm sure a few others as well but i've never done a video for what is probably my favourite flatbread and that would be garlic nom so that's what we're attempting to do today and it can be challenging without the super hot tandoor oven but I think I've come up with a pretty decent technique for doing these in the home kitchen as you're gonna see relatively soon but before we get to that we have to start our dough which will begin as usual with some very warm but not too hot water into which we will add a little bit of white sugar as well as one packet of dry active yeast and what we'll do is just let that sit there for about ten to fifteen minutes to sort of give that yeast a head start and also to test if it's alive and what we can do while we're waiting for that is move on to make our garlic butter which we'll start by melting one stick of butter over medium heat in the small pan if for the record I'm making way more than I need for this recipe since there's like forty other things we can use that for and what we'll do once that melts is wait for it to sing before we add our garlic and what I mean by saying is that we're waiting for this summer all right you do that and once our butter starts doing that we'll go ahead and stir it up and a lot of it that was like four giant clubs and we will quickly mix that in and immediately turn off the heat all right very important we really don't want to cook the garlic too much so basically as soon as we add it and stir it in we're gonna turn off our heat and we could just leave that on the stove until we're ready to use it so our garlic butter is set and we could head back to check out our East which as you can see was most certainly alive and I can tell because it looks like the head of a beer and that's our signal it's okay to go ahead and add the rest of the ingredients which will include a spoon of plain yogurt as well as some bread flour although I'm pretty sure you can use all-purpose for this we will also toss in some salt and then last but not least one tablespoon of our freshly made garlic infused butter and once all that's in there we'll take a wooden spoon and start mixing and we will keep mixing until we form what we call the bit a shaggy doe which is gonna look a little something like this and then what we'll do once we've reached our shaggy doe stage is switched to our hand and we'll get in there and we'll start pressing and pushing everything together until eventually we can sort of start kneading and we'll keep doing that until basically everything's been pulled off the sides of the bowl and we've sort of formed a rough ball of dough and it might seem obvious but I'll tell you anyway if things seem too dry and it's not coming together just add a little touch of water or if it's too wet and sticky to come together just add a little more flour okay that is just you cooking but anyway once it does come together like this we'll go ahead and transfer that onto our table and we will need that for about three or four minutes until we have a fairly smooth a fairly elastic dough and if you have to dust it with a little bit of flour go ahead but because of that little bit of garlic butter we added it shouldn't really stick to the table too much so we'll go ahead and keep kneading that as shown until like I said we have something that's fairly smooth and it sort of springs back to the touch so that is looking pretty good right there and once that's been accomplished we will transfer that into a bowl and then we'll drizzle over a little more of our garlic butter so we can coat our dough so it won't dry out while it rises and of course you could use a little bit of oil like we usually do but that butter was right there and then what we'll do once that set is cover it and let it sit for about an hour to two hours or until it doubles in size and generally does that have some fat in them like this one will take a little bit longer to rise so don't panic if this takes a little longer than you're used to and after about two hours might look like this and then as usual we'll go ahead and punch that down and transfer it onto our table where we are quickly going to press it into some kind of rectangular shape or by the way any semi-regular shape because the only reason we're doing this is to make it easier to cut into six pieces with our bench scraper and theoretically if our dough is a nice even size we should be able to cut our six portions into pretty even sizes but of course having said that as you can see mine were not that even which is fine because this is none and you do not want to trust a pile of naan bread that's all exactly the same size all right we don't want this looking like it came out of a machine which is clearly not going to be an issue here but anyway once those are cuts we will use a cupped hand to sort of rub those on the table in a circular motion so that we end up with six mini dough balls and once that's done we'll go ahead and lightly dust those with flour and then what we'll do is cover those with some plastic wrap and we will let them sit there for about 15 to 20 minutes to proof which is just a fancy baking word for a brief second rising and after about 15 or 20 minutes this is what mine look like so yes in that short amount of time they will puff up a fair amount and that's it once these are proofed we can start rolling those out on a very lightly floured surface and I generally shoot for about an eighth of an inch thick and by the way feel free to make these round if he wants but I believe traditionally these do have more of an oval shape and besides an oval is easier than a circle but either way like I said we'll roll that out to about an eighth of an inch at which point I'm gonna do one optional step and that would be depressed and/or roll a little bit of freshly chopped cilantro onto one side and for once my cilantro was nice and dry and easy to use which made it a little bit harder to stick but that's okay just press it or roll it on the best you can and again this is optional so skip it if you want I mean you are after all this Chef John of your garlic naan but I think it looks cool and provides more flavour so I do it and that's it once our naan has been rolled and herbed we will head to the stove where we will place that in an insanely hot cast-iron skillet okay so preheat that on high and then once you think it's hot enough wait another five minutes and that it's probably ready and you'll see as soon as you put that in bubbles are going to start forming on the surface okay probably lots of little ones and then a few random big ones and those bubbles are kind of key because what's gonna happen after a couple minutes is we're gonna flip this and we'll give it a gentle pressing with our spatula and ideally when we flip this back over wherever those larger bubbles were there's going to be a perfect char mark from the pan so we will flip that over and give the second side a couple minutes at which point if everything's gone according to plan we should have something that looks like this and the whole key here is make sure the pan was smoking hot and then what we'll do to finish this is we remove it from the pan just go ahead and brush that on both sides with our warm garlic butter plus if you want you can spoon on some of that chopped garlic and if you want some people like to sprinkle over a little coarse salt here so suit yourself oh by the way if it looks like I'm putting too much garlic butter on this I'm not that's just the light playing tricks with your eyes Plus as this sits most of that will soak in although I'm not going to give this one time to since I'm going in for the official taste right now and hopefully what we've achieved here is something that's kind of chewy but still tender with a little bit of random crispness here and there from those charred blisters plus above and beyond the aforementioned amazing texture we're talking about a substantial amount of buttery garlicky goodness so yes maybe the world's best garlic bread is not actually garlic bread it might be garlic naan and of course is your finishing one of these you really should be singing nanananana nanananana hey goodbye but anyway after ate that one I went ahead and did the rest and like every flat bread at pancake and crepe the last couple you do will always be better than the first few which is probably because the dough is rested longer but also because your pan is probably getting hotter plus you've had a few to practice on and that's it once we've cooked them all and piled them up maybe we'll finish with a little more cilantro and that my friends is one handsome plate of garlic naan and as amazing as that one I ate all by itself was you put this next to some spicy curry like for example this creamy cashew chicken curry that I'm probably going to show you very soon and you're gonna take this experience up to a whole other level it's in like off-the-charts delicious I mean if there's a better combination than a rich creamy aromatic chicken curry paired with a crispy chewy buttery garlic naan I would really like to know what that is but anyway that's it's my take on a home version of garlic naan there's only one appropriate way I could think to end this video no no no no actually I'm not gonna sing again and I'll finish by simply saying I really do hope you give this a try soon so head over to food which is calm for all the ingredient amounts of Morpho edges and as always you
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Channel: Food Wishes
Views: 2,746,766
Rating: 4.8964849 out of 5
Keywords: Naan, Garlic, Flatbread, indian, curry, bread, chef, john, food, wishes, butter, side, dish, cooking, recipes
Id: wmbpOb9neLY
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 9min 20sec (560 seconds)
Published: Tue Feb 19 2019
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