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Sourdough NAAN Flatbread

June 08, 20244 min read

Sourdough NAAN Flatbread

“This was so yummy straight off the grill!”


I would love more FREE recipes and tips straight to my IN BOX!

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My daughter loves NAAN bread and she was coming home for the day, so I decided to make it special for her to take back to college with her. I had not tried this recipe but was so glad I did. This was extra fun to make since I mixed it up outside, then grilled it outside after the bulk ferment as well. This was supposed to take 8 hours to bulk ferment, which I did inside because it was way too hot in Arizona at the time. The dough more than doubled in a short 4 hours much to my surprise. Thankfully I went inside to check on it just in time.

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Prep Time: 40 min

Bulk Ferment Time: 4-8 hours

Cook Time: 3 min

Servings: 8 servings

Ingredients

For the NAAN:

  • 275g organic all purpose flour (2 heaping cups), A portion of whole grain flour can be substituted.

  • 200g sourdough starter (2/3 cup stirred down)

  • 125g milk⁠ (~1/2 cup), I substituted coconut milk.

  • 75g yogurt⁠ (1/4 cup), I used Cocojune Pure Coconut milk yogurt

  • 5g salt⁠ (1 tsp)

  • Flour for your countertop

  • Oil or butter for your rolling pin

  • Optional: Minced garlic and cilantro or other herbs to add to the dough before rolling it flat, or to combine with melted butter and brush on the flatbreads after they are cooked.

Preparation Steps

1. Mix all of the ingredients in a bowl and then hand-knead for a few minutes. Add extra flour if the dough is too sticky or more milk if it's too dry. ⁠(I used coconut milk as I am allergic to dairy milk).

2. Cover the dough and let rise by 70-100%. This can take several days in the refrigerator or 4-8 hours at room temperature (or more), depending on the temperature and starter ripeness.

3. Scrape the dough onto a floured countertop, de-gas and divide it in eight pieces. I cut the dough like it is a pie. This is a good time to add minced garlic, chives or herbs if you want. Keep the pieces small, though, to not break the dough when you roll it flat.

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4. Roll the triangles into eight balls, keeping track of which ball you made first so this can be the dough you fry first. I no longer do a final proof, finding that the bread is more bubbly this way. You simply need about 10 minutes between making the first ball and trying to roll it flat for the gluten to relax again.

5. On your stovetop or outdoor grill, preheat a 10-inch or larger cast iron pan or griddle to "medium." You'll arrive at the perfect temperature for your pan and burner via trial and error.

6. Roll out your first ball to a little less than 1/4 inch thick . I very lightly flour my counter and very lightly oil my rolling pin.

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7. Transfer the dough to the hot frying pan and cook each side for 1-2 minutes. Flip when the top of the dough bubbles and the sides curl under.⁠ You're aiming for brown spots, so adjust your heat accordingly.

8. Place the cooked naans on a rack to cool. You should have time to roll one dough while frying another. When all the naans are cooked and cool, cover or wrap them so they don’t dry out.⁠ You can also brush them with melted garlic-and-herb butter while they're warm if you want. We just ripped them apart and dipped them in olive oil. They were simply delicious.

9. You can freeze and reheat the naan flatbread in the toaster.

NOTE
This is a stovetop and sourdough-leavened variation on Indian naan flatbread. This dough is easy to mix up, has a non-traditional cooking strategy of using a hot cast-iron pan. The flatbread is delicious when served with traditional Indian lentils or used to dip in hummus or even make personal toaster-oven pizzas. They freeze well and you may find yourself doubling the batch to have more in stock.

The original recipe is from Breadtopia.



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Nancy Busch

Nancy was gifted a sourdough starter for Christmas one year and was immediately hooked. She loves trying new recipes, new techniques, and experimenting with flavors and scoring.

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