Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Amaranth & Wheat Flour Rotis

Amaranth is a pseudocereal like quinoa and buckwheat and has been cultivated over thousands of years in various parts of the world. It is a protein rich grain with low glycemic index and the cooked seeds, flour and greens are all edible. It is gluten free making it an healthier substitute over wheat for people with gluten  intolerance. I am not new to the plant since a couple of species of amaranth leaves are eaten through out India and it happens to be in fact, one of my favorite greens while growing up.

On the other hand, amaranth flour is not consumed in south India but seems to be a staple ingredient during fasting days of Navratri in many northern and western kitchens of India, where it goes by the name rajgire ka atta. The seeds by the way are called ramdana / rajgira. Coincidentally, Navratri began yesterday and people who practice the fasting ritual (which is in a way to detoxify one's system) abstain from grains / millets during this period and replace them with ingredients like amaranth flour, buckwheat flour, chestnut flour and tapioca pearls which are not typical pantry staples of Indian kitchens excepting the last one.  

I have started using amaranth flour in my kitchen about an year ago and it goes mainly in making rotis like these or thalipeeth. If one is new to roti making, amaranth flour is not the right choice to start your practice with. That would be atta aka the Indian wheat flour. Amaranth flour is gluten free and so some starch like mashed potatoes need to go along with it to form a dough. If adhering to the fasting rituals, omit the wheat flour and salt from the recipe and use rock salt instead. The resulting rotis with this dough are thinner and softer than the regular rotis. They can be served with a spicy curry / lentil based gravy. Or make rotis spicier by adding minced green chillies & ginger / red chili powder to the dough while preparing and serve with plain yogurt.
Ingredients: (Yield 15 rotis)
1 big sized potato
2 cups amaranth flour (rajgira atta)
1/2 cup wheat flour (atta) + extra for dusting
1/8 tsp. salt (optional)
About 1/4 cup oil (I used canola oil.)

Directions:
* Peel and boil the potato in a microwave. Let it come to room temperature and mash the potato finely, leaving no lumps. Don't throw away the water used to boil the potato as it can be used to make the roti dough. (I had slightly less than 1/2 cup of mashed potato. It doesn't matter if  the potato is slightly less or more than the quantity I used.)

* Combine flours, salt and mashed potato in a mixing bowl. Rub the potato well into the flour. Grease your palms if  needed since the mixture tends to get sticky while making the dough. Add water gradually in slow increments and make a soft, pliable dough. (I needed slightly less than 1/2 cup water.) Add a tbsp. or two of oil to the dough and work the dough for about 30 seconds. Cover and let the dough rest for about 30 minutes. (I rested it for about 90 minutes.) 
* Heat a skillet / rimless non-stick pan on medium flame. (Don't heat the griddle yet if not well versed with the routine of rolling and toasting parts simultaneously. One can roll out some dough circles prior to heating a griddle.) 
* Grease your palms with oil and divide the mixture into 12 - 15 portions and roll them into balls and keep the covered.  Grease your palms again if needed and work with one ball at a time. Press the ball into a disc between palms and gently roll into a thin circle on a dusted rolling board / clean counter top using a rolling pin. Dust a little extra flour in between, only if needed.
 
* Place the rolled out dough circle on the hot griddle. When the surface starts to dry out and bubbles appear on the bottom side, flip it with a spatula. Gently press it with the spatula all over. Pour 1/4 tsp of oil around the edges and surface and flip again. Press again with the spatula and flip. Toast it until both sides have brown spots developed all over. It would take a few seconds on each side to cook once the skillet is hot. Transfer the cooked roti onto a clean plate and repeat the process with the rolling and toasting parts. Keep the cooked rotis covered until serving.
* Serve them with a spicy accompaniment.

Comments

14 comments:

  1. Interesting addition of Amarnath flour, and those rotis looks extremely prefect, am yet to cook with amarnath flour, waiting eagerly for your next posts..

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  2. having millet flours used on regular basis really helps you gaining nutrients. been more than a month we are consuming millets. It is great addition in meal.

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  3. The rotis are so perfect Suma. Working with GF flour is really tough. The addition of potatoes and whewh flour will help in the process. The rotis look super soft..

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  4. Amaranth is a very healthy alternative. This would be a good filling dinner with a veggie Curry.

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  5. I made a stuffed poli for the BM marathon and I know how tough it is to handle amaranth flour. But adding potato and wheat flour definitely makes it easier to handle and those rotis look wonderful.

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  6. Om ma! The rotis are delicious. Will taste good with daal, sabji pickle. Drooling!

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  7. Wow very interesting dish with Amaranth flour. Perfectly made.

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  8. Suma that's a fantastic pick to do with Amaranth flour..you have got the rotis done really so thin and nice!

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  9. I've never tried making roti with amaranth flour. Your rotis turned out perfect -- adding wheat flour makes them so much easier to make.

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  10. Can't make out that these rotis are made of amaranth flour....so soft and perfectly made

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  11. Those rotis look so soft and lovely. I have some amaranth flour left...this looks like the perfect recipe to use it up. Yum choice!

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  12. That is a great recipe to make with Amaranth flour. I have some amaranth flour left and I am going to make this.

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  13. Those roti;s looks perfectly done suma!! soft and just like our regular roti's!!!

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  14. Roti looks so perfect and soft... healthy and interesting option instead of regular one.

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