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Milk Street Bowtie Potato-Stuffed Naan

Potato-Stuffed Naan

Makes six 6-inch naan

3 hours 1½ hours active

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At Pappa Gee Happy Bhai Food Corner in Lahore, Pakistan, Jawaid Ahmed taught us to make aloo naan, a fluffy flatbread filled with chili- and herb-spiked potatoes and cabbage. The resulting bread is tender yet chewy, spottily browned and studded with pockets of spicy, fragrant filling. To recreate it back at Milk Street, there were a few obstacles. First was developing an easy-to-handle dough, sturdy enough to withstand filling and rolling, but bakes up light and fluffy. The second was imitating the hot, fast bake of a tandoor oven. For the dough, we looked to yogurt, an ingredient often used in naan. Its calcium content makes for tender bread, so even with the rigors of rolling and stuffing, the naan stays pleasantly soft. As for cooking, we tried countless oven and broiler settings, but found a hot cast-iron skillet worked best. The naan are hearty enough to be a light meal on their own or with chutney, but also pair wonderfully with a simple curry. Leftovers reheat nicely in a cast-iron skillet over medium; warm each for two to three minutes per side.

Makes six

6-inch naan

Tip

Don’t be tempted to adjust the water or flour quantities while kneading, as the dough will go through stages. At first, it may seem too dry. After a few minutes of kneading, it may feel too wet. With continued kneading, it will become supple, slightly tacky and workable. Don’t melt the ghee before brushing it onto the naan; we found that melted ghee made the breads heavy and greasy. Room-temperature ghee brushed onto the hot bread melts into a light, non-oily coating.

3 hours

1½ hours active

80 grams (⅓ cup) plain whole-milk yogurt
455 grams (3½ cups) all-purpose flour
2¼ teaspoons instant yeast
1 teaspoon table salt
Grapeseed or other neutral oil, for greasing the bowl and baking sheets
1½ pounds russet potatoes, peeled and cut into ½-inch chunks
1½ tablespoons ghee or salted butter, room temperature
1½ teaspoons cumin seeds
1 teaspoon Kashmiri chili powder or ¾ teaspoon sweet paprika plus ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon table salt
3 ounces (1 cup) finely shredded napa cabbage
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh mint
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh cilantro
2 serrano chilies, stemmed, seeded and minced
Ghee or salted butter, room temperature
Sesame seeds
For the dough:
  • 80

    grams (⅓ cup) plain whole-milk yogurt

  • 455

    grams (3½ cups) all-purpose flour

  • teaspoons instant yeast

  • 1

    teaspoon table salt

  • Grapeseed or other neutral oil, for greasing the bowl and baking sheets

For the filling:
  • pounds russet potatoes, peeled and cut into ½-inch chunks

  • tablespoons ghee or salted butter, room temperature

  • teaspoons cumin seeds

  • 1

    teaspoon Kashmiri chili powder or ¾ teaspoon sweet paprika plus ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper

  • 1

    teaspoon table salt

  • 3

    ounces (1 cup) finely shredded napa cabbage

  • 2

    tablespoons finely chopped fresh mint

  • 2

    tablespoons finely chopped fresh cilantro

  • 2

    serrano chilies, stemmed, seeded and minced

For brushing and sprinkling:
  • Ghee or salted butter, room temperature

  • Sesame seeds

Directions

Potato-Stuffed Naan

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Reviews
Eric M.
May 4, 2024
Clean up the ingredients list to match to order of operations.
Maybe list the water in grams (185) as an ingredient.
Mary O.
May 17, 2024
Tasty but time consuming
Really tasty but a lot of prep and time involved. The fillings are delicious! Wondering if there's some way to make through step 5 and refrigerate so all you need to do is cook before dinner. Also, using a kitchen aid instead of all the kneading by hand?