Thursday 30 September 2010

Chapati


Bismilahi er-rahman elrahim

Chapati has been mainly introduced to Oman by Omanis who lived in Zanzibar and the East coast of Tanzania Now. Zanzibar and the areas in the coast were under Oman, conquered in the seventeenth century till the last century.

I would guess that it started with people living there who originally are from the Indian sub-continent. Whether this is called chapati or not in these areas I am not sure, but it is known as chapati in Oman.

Ingredients:

These ingredients will give you six medium-sized chapatis
2 glasses of flour (I mix 1 cup of all purpose flour and a cup of wholewheat flour)
2 tbs powdered milk
2 tbs ghee
1 tsp salt
1 glass water

المقادير:
كوبين طحين (كوب طحين ابيض, وكوب طحين اسمر)
ملعقتي طعام حليب باودر
ملعقتي طعام سمن
ملعقة شاي ملح
كوب ماء

Method:
  • Mix all ingredients, knead the dough in a floured surface, add more flour if it sticks and knead till you get a smooth dough, the longer time you knead the better
  • divide into 3 balls
  • use a rolling pin, roll the balls till they are very thin, don't focus on them being perfectly round because it's not your last step. Add a little less than a teaspoon of ghee and rub over the chapati, the next pictures show you what to do next.

  • Here you might need to hold the mid-part of the chapati so it doesn't be pulled while you roll.



  • Here you will need to squeeze them to be sort of flat. the corn-shaped one move the top part in circular motion as you move down,I don't know if I am clear!


  • Heat a pan (low heat), roll into not very thin chapatis, cook till you see puffy chapati, and turn it to the other side, in this step always increase the heat to moderate, and squeeze the chapati a little.


  • Turn the chapati again but now add a tsp of greese, turn it back and squeeze it.

  • Turn it again to the other side for few seconds, and remove it to the plate.

I hope I was clear. Chapatis are served anytime, with breakfast we have them with milk tea or herbal tea. Or at lunch or dinner with curry or salad.

6 comments:

  1. Masha'Allah - they look perfect!

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  2. Thank you sister for the sweet compliment:) 

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  3. Chapati is also popular in the Asian sub-continent.You have demonstrated so perfectly.I also like to comment on your Turkish cuisine.The pictures are so scrumptious looking.I'm an Asian from an island in the sub-continent,living in the middle East For almost two decades now..We sure enjoy the mouthwatering food...

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  4. aynzan thanks so much for your lovely comments :)

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  5. MashaAllah ...we east african love chapati in anything or on its own they luk delicious. I will try your with milk powder.

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  6. Wangari in kenya19 June 2017 at 11:01

    Wow! looking yummy oh!
    Thanks for the tips

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