Monday, February 13, 2012

Nan bread in conventional oven not giving same flavor

Question

I recently tried this recipe for Nan bread in an oven and followed it diligently:
http://indianfood.about.com/od/breadrecipes/r/naan.htm But the product that came out did not have that characteristic flavor of Nan. It was more like a pizza bread without topping. Also it was a bit puffier than the Nan they serve in restaurants, which is of a flat nature. Is the flavor that you get in an autentic Indian restaurant solely because of the clay oven? I hope not:)

Asked by Kaushik

Answer

The flavor you want is from the high heat of the clay oven (around 900F, much like a wood-fired pizza oven). Probably nothing you can do to truly replicate it at home, but here are some things to try:

  • Use a pizza stone in the oven, and turn the oven to MAX, as hot as it will go (above 500F). Let it preheat for 45 min at least to get the stone to full heat. Put the dough right on the stone (either by hand - risky but traditional, or with a pizza peel or upside down sheet pan covered in corn meal). The naan will cook much quicker, maybe 3-5 minutes at most. If you can get the oven hot enough, you'll get a little of the "char" that is part of the flavor.
  • After mixing the ingredients, let the dough rest overnight in the fridge. The next day, pull it out, let it warm to room temp and resume the proofing process. That will let more sugars be created from enzymes converting starch to sugar, and will slightly improve browning (part of the flavor you are looking for).

Of course, if you want to get fun, you could look into one of the many tutorials on building a wood-fired oven in your yard. Lots of great baking to be had there, including a more traditional naan bread. For more tips, read up on all the things people do to their home ovens to bake better pizza - they will all apply to clay oven baking as well. Things like hearth inserts, faking out the "cleaning cycle" and other tips are common.

Answered by phidauex

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