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452 Block F1 Johar Town, Lahore, Pakistan
Traditionally, Roghni Naan are Naans which are made using white flour, yogurt, milk and butter in a super hot clay oven, called a tandoor. They’re sprinkled with a hearty helping of sesame seeds and nigella seeds (kalonji) which leave a delicious, savoury aftertaste.
There are some curries with which only a good Naan will do. A hearty Nihari, Haleem, some chicken korma, your favourite karahi… only a Naan will suffice. Nothing more, nothing less.
I’m pretty sure most of you reading this post probably don’t have access to a tandoor oven at home. If you do, I’m pretty jealous that’s great! However, if you don’t, this recipe has instructions for how to cook your Roghni Naan in both your regular oven and on the stove.
Making Roghni Naan at home requires a bit more effort than your standard roti.
We’ll start by getting a large bowl and adding some warm milk into it, followed by a packet of fast-action yeast. Allow that to sit for a few moments – with fast-action yeast you don’t really need to let it activate. If you have any other kind of yeast, check the packet to see how long you need to rest it for to allow it to activate.
To the milk, now add some butter. Whisk that in – the butter will probably melt if the milk is still warm.
Now add sugar and salt. All the quantities are in the recipe card below.
And then add in an egg and whisk.
Now, some full-fat yogurt. Whisk.
It’ll be thick, gloopy and possibly lumpy too.
Finally, we’re going to add some white flour. You can use plain flour OR self-raising flour. Self raising flour makes some pretty epic extra fluffy Naan. But I’m pretty certain the tandoors in Pakistan stick with good ol’ all purpose flour for their Roghni Naans. Add in a bit at a time – around the 500-650g mark you’ll begin to be able to knead it without it being overly sticky. Once you get to that stage, give the dough a good kneading. You can turn it out onto your countertop if it helps you – that’s how I tend to knead my naan dough.
Once it’s been kneaded well, place it back into a bowl, brush it with oil and then cover with some cling film. Leave it in a warm place until it has doubled in size (about 2-3hrs, depending on how warm it’s kept)
Once it’s been rolled out, take the end of your rolling pin or a wooden spoon and poke holes into the surface of the Naan. Be forceful, the dough will likely be a bit resistance and it’s absolutely A-OK if you pierce through the dough completely. This step is really important because if you don’t punch in those holes, your Naan will begin to puff up in the oven like a pita bread and won’t have that proper Roghni Naan texture.
Place the Naans onto a greaseproof paper, then transfer into an oven that’s been preheated at 200 degrees celcius. Keep close and allow the Naan to bake undisturbed for approximately 8-10 minutes, until it’s golden on top. You don’t need to flip it in the oven. Take it out once it’s golden on top, then immediately brush over the top with some butter
You can cook your Roghni Naan much like you’d cook a roti. Place the Naan onto a preheated skillet/tava and cook one side until it begins to take on some colour. Use a spatula to flip the Naan, then cook the other side too. Once both sides have turned golden brown, take off the skillet and brush over with butter immediately.
As if Roghni Naans needed any additional help stealing the show 😉
On to the recipe – I hope you enjoy these as much as we do!
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