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Home Indian Recipes

Naan recipe – chewy & fluffy!

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published24 Feb '21 Updated28 Apr '25
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So many naan recipes are nothing more than a basic flatbread recipe. But this one? Fluffy, bubbly and CHEWY, just like you get at Indian restaurants. It’s so incredible, you’d swear it’s just been pulled from a tandoor! Bonus: It’s mind-bogglingly easy. Yes, really!

This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!

Brushing melted garlic butter on a freshly cooked naan

🌶 Welcome back to Indian Week! 🌶

This week there will be three brand new, iconic Indian recipes to make your very own Indian feast:

  1. Palak Paneer – The famous Indian Spinach Curry with homemade Paneer (cheese!)

  2. Naan – This recipe, FIVE YEARS in the making, it’s finally here!

  3. Samosas – Oh yes we did … and it’s AMAZING!!!

Plus a colourful side salad – a Cabbage & Carrot Thoran-style Salad! (PS I am literally obsessed with that salad…)

Freshly cooked Palak Paneer in a skillet, ready to be served
Palak Paneer – Spinach Curry
Indian Cabbage Carrot Salad in a bowl, ready to be tossed
Thoran-style Indian Cabbage Salad
Samosas on a plate with tamarind dipping sauce
Samosas

Naan recipe

Truly fluffy, chewy, bubbly naan has eluded me for years. Every other recipe I tried – and believe me, I’ve tried so many I’ve lost count – are just basic flatbread recipes with no real crumb integrity and absolutely none of the signature elasticity that real restaurant naan has.

As for the versions made without yeast? Forget it. They were more like pancakes.

Fact: You can’t make naan that bubbles up like THIS without using yeast!! ↓↓↓

Bubbly puffy naan being cooked in a hot skillet

It’s difficult to capture how chewy and fluffy this naan bread is in a photo – so let me try to show you instead with some live action:

Yerrrrrssss. And the most incredible thing? Naan dough is so easy to make. There is no kneading involved. Really. There is nothing tricky about it at all!

Tearing homemade naan to show how chewy it is

What goes in Naan

Here’s what you need to make the puffiest, fluffiest, bubbliest naan of your life. No fiercely hot tandoor required (unless that’s how you roll … )

Naan ingredients
  • Flour – Bread flour produces a slightly fluffier, softer naan than using plain/all-purpose flour. But the difference is actually quite marginal, so I’m not going to recommend it as strongly as I do in other recipes where using bread flour really makes a difference (eg. like in our favourite Crusty Artisan Bread).

    So in short, use bread flour if you have it. But if you don’t, I wouldn’t make a special trip to the supermarket because this naan is excellent made with all-purpose/plain flour too;

  • Yeast – Instant / rapid-rise yeast is called for here. The recipe also works with standard active / dry yeast, but we’ve found the naan is slightly fluffier and softer using instant yeast.

    Unusually, we dissolve the instant yeast in warm water then leave it to become foamy – a step usually bypassed with instant yeast, which is typically mixed straight into dough. However, for this recipe, we found that the naan is fluffier if dissolved in warm water first. Yes, we’ve made a LOT of naan in recent weeks!!!

  • Ghee or butter – Ghee is basically the same thing as clarified butter. This is simply normal butter but with milk solids and water removed, leaving behind pure butter fat. Ghee has a more intense butter flavour than normal butter, with the added bonus that unlike butter, it doesn’t burn even on high heat.

    You can either make your own Ghee (it’s cheaper, really easy and keeps for months), buy it, or just use normal butter; and

Spoon scooping up homemade ghee
Ghee – a type of clarified butter – brings an intense buttery flavour to anything it touches!
  • Egg, milk, white sugar, salt – All fairly standard bread inclusions. I use cow’s milk, but given the small quantity used in this recipe, I see no reason why non-dairy alternatives wouldn’t work.

“No yoghurt?” I used to be an advocate of yoghurt in naan bread, believing it to be the “secret ingredient” that made naan different from “just another flatbread”.

But actually, yogurt weighs the naan down and makes it a bit gummier inside. Added yoghurt is no challenge for the nuclear-level 480°C heat of a tandoor … but in a home kitchen, the naan is better without yogurt. It’s just fluffier!

Balls of naan dough rising

How to make Naan

This section may look lengthy, but I promise this naan recipe is not hard. I’m just breaking down the steps for you and showing thorough process photos so you can have total confidence that you’ll nail this – even if you’re new to working with yeast doughs.

And guess what? Naan dough doesn’t requiring kneading!!

Bloom the yeast

First step: Let’s get the yeast activated and ready to work its magic on our naan dough.

How to make Naan
  1. Mix instant yeast with warm water and sugar – This is not a typical step you see in bread-making when using instant yeast. Usually the whole point of instant yeast is that you can add it straight into dough without mixing with warm water and letting it foam first.

    But, for naan, we found that blooming instant yeast in a warm water and sugar mixture (ie. letting it sit until it goes foamy) makes the naan fluffier and softer. It’s also an excellent safety test to ensure your yeast is still alive – nothing worse than discovering your yeast is dead once your bread is in the oven! ;;

  2. Leave until foamy – Leave the mixture for 10 minutes until it becomes foamy, which means the yeast is alive and kicking. The warm water “wakes up” the yeast and the sugar helps too because yeast “eats” sugar to do its thing;

Make Naan dough

How to make Naan
  1. Mix dry and wet ingredients – In a large bowl, mix together the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, salt), then add the foamy yeast, butter / ghee, and the milk + eggs;

  2. Mix – Start by mixing with a firm rubber spatula or a wooden spoon to bring the dough together. We use spoons for no reason other than saving a sticky mess on your hands!

Bring together into ball

How to make Naan
  1. Bring together by hand – Once the mixture is too stiff to practically mix with a spatula, switch to hands. You don’t need to knead the dough, just mix it with your hands to bring it together into a cohesive dough;

  2. The dough – Once the dough comes together, it should be sticky and soft enough to easily come together into a ball. But it should not be so sticky that the dough sticks to your hands – see picture above for right texture. If the dough is too sticky, sprinkle over a little flour and work that in;

Rise dough 1 to 1.5 hours – let it double in size

How to make Naan
My dough went further than double in size, probably triple, because it was a very hot day when I made this! It’s still ok if it rises this much.
  1. Proof dough – Once the butter / ghee is incorporated, shape dough into a ball. Cover with cling-wrap then put the bowl somewhere warm to let it proof – about 1 – 1.5 hours, until it has doubled in volume;

  2. Doubled in volume – The dough pictured above is after proofing for 1 1/2 hours. It has actually more than doubled because it was a very (no really, a very!) hot day. It’s ok if it more than doubles – mine is probably closer to triple. But if the dough rises way too much (as in even more than triple), then the yeast can run out of oomph and not rise properly when cooked. Try to limit proofing to doubling in size!

Divide into six balls

How to make Naan
  1. Cut into six pieces – Lift the dough out of the bowl on to a lightly floured surface. Cut into 6 equal pieces. This makes ~15 – 16 cm / 6 – 6.5″ diameter naans which are a nice individual serving size and comfortably cooked in a skillet;

  2. Shape into balls – Make the top surface smooth by tucking the dough surface to the base;

Rise 15 minutes – let increase in size 50%

How to make Naan
  1. Rise 15 minutes, 50% increase in size – Place the balls on a lightly floured tray, and cover loosely with a a lightweight tea towel (ie just place it on top, don’t tuck it tightly under the tray). Leave to rise in a warm place for 15 minutes until they increase in size by about 50%. It doesn’t take long;

  2. After rising – Photo #12 is what they look like after 15 minutes. Ready to roll out and cook!

Roll out

How to make Naan
  1. Flatten on lightly floured surface – Pick up a piece and flat it down lightly on a lightly floured surface;

  2. Roll out into  3 – 4mm / 0.12 – 0.16″ thick rounds (about 16cm / 6.5″ wide). The thickness really affects the outcome. Too thin = crispier and not fluffy enough. Too thick and you won’t get the bubbles. We want the best of both worlds, ie. it should bubble up when cooked, be soft and fluffy inside and the naan itself should be floppy, not stiff.  3 – 4mm / 0.12 – 0.16″ thick is the perfect thickness – so pull out that ruler! 😉

Cook Naan

How to make Naan
  1. Hot skillet – Heat a well-seasoned* cast iron skillet over medium-high heat until it is just starting to smoke. Then place the naan in and leave to cook without touching. If you’re like me, you’ll get a kick out of watching the surface blister up and go all bubbly – it’s an extremely satisfying moment!

    * Well-seasoned skillets: If you maintain your cast iron skillets properly, they should be naturally non-stick and lightly greased! 😇 That’s all you need to make naan. But if it’s not, just pour 1/2 tsp vegetable oil on a paper towel then rub it over the base. Don’t pour the oil in, naan is not meant to be pan fried in oil, it’s “dry”-cooked.

    I use a Lodge brand cast iron skillet – more on it here (excellent value, and indestructible!).

    If using another type of skillet, do the same light oil rub. But you should not really be making naan in non-stick coated skillets – the high heat required destroys the non-stick coating!

  2. 60 to 90 seconds cooking, then flip – It should only take 60 – 90 seconds for the underside to cook until it’s nicely browned. Then use tongs to turn;

Brush with ghee

How to make Naan
  1. After flip, 45 – 60 seconds more – The blistered side (photo #17) will only take around 45 seconds to cook. You’re just looking for a little charring on the blisters and for the surface of the second side to be cooked.

    Aim for fast cooking (also as not to burn the ghee). The faster it cooks, the closer you get to real naan like that cooked in the fierce heat of a tandoor, and the fluffier your naan will be!

    The slower it cooks, on the other hand, the less fluffy the naan will be. 2 to 2 1/2 minutes total is ideal. Beyond this, the naan will start to dry out inside and you’ll lose the signature texture; and finally

  2. Brush with ghee or butter (optionally also garlic – but yes you absolutely should!) –- Remove naan from the stove, then brush with melted ghee or butter while it’s still hot. Garlic is an optional extra, but it’s so good!

    For an authentic finishing touch, add a sprinkle of nigella seeds for a delicious onion-y pops!

Burshing melted garlic butter on a freshly cooked naan in a hot cast iron skillet

Cheese Naan recipe!

I’m going to be honest, I’ve no idea whether you can even find Cheese Naan in India (please chime in, in the comments!). But it’s a firm favourite around my neck of the wood. Certainly this Cheese-loving Carb Monster considers Cheese Naan one of the great achievements of modern mankind.

Authentic or not, it’s amazing! (And really, what is it but the equivalent of an Indian-style grilled cheese sandwich – yum!?)

Cheese naan being picked up - cheese pull shot!

How to make Cheese Naan

In restaurants, cheese naan is usually made by cooking plain naan first, then cutting a slit and stuffing inside the naan with cheese to melt.

That’s quite tedious and involves burnt fingertip agony I’m yet to fall in love with, so I’ve opted for a much simpler method:

How to make Cheese Naan
  1. Brush naan first with garlic butter, if desired (because like mentioned, well, why not? Now you have Indian-style cheesy garlic bread! 😉)

  2. Pile cheese in the middle, then bundle it up like a money bag;

  3. Twist the top to seal;

  4. Flip over then roll out;

How to make Cheese Naan
  1. Cook in a hot skillet just like normal naan;

  2. When you flip, it will puff up dramatically! Don’t get too excited, because it then deflates. 😂 But it looks impressive – even if nobody else saw it!

Here’s what the inside of the cheese naan looks like – in case you’re wondering if I used enough cheese 😂 Be still my beating heart … ( excitement or cholesterol sirens? I can’t quite distinguish 🤔)

Showing the inside of Cheese Naan

Make-ahead option – for even better flavour!

It was handy to discover that the naan recipe can be made ahead, refrigerated overnight and cooked up the next day – and it’s 100% perfect. It’s just as fluffy and soft. With the added bonus of even better flavour in the bread because as with many yeast breads, flavour develops with time!

Stack of freshly cooked homemade naan
Scooping up Butter Chicken with fresh homemade naan

What to serve with naan

I feel like I’m stating the obvious here by saying that the most natural, most obvious way to use naan is to scoop and slop up curries – Butter Chicken, Rogan Josh, Dal, Tikka Masala, to name a few!

Also think uses as a wrap: Stuff them, say, with Tandoori Chicken or Chicken Tikka (use the Chicken Tikka part of Tikka Marsala), along with some fresh Indian Tomato Salad with Mint Sauce for a complete meal in a wrap.

But then I realised: I’ve been devouring an inordinate amount of naan just as it is. Straight out of the skillet, with and without butter, cold, warm, reheated – and loving it like it is.

The lesson? Naan this good you can have it every which way. It’s 100% incredible. Make it once and I guarantee you’ll be addicted for life! – Nagi x


🌶 Indian week!🌶

Just to recap, it’s Indian Week here at RecipeTin Eats! A week when I’m sharing 4 brand new recipes to make your own epic Indian feast at home:

  • Palak Paneer – Indian Spinach Curry with homemade cheese curds!

  • Naan – this recipe, the fluffiest homemade naan of your life…

  • Thoran-style Indian Cabbage Salad – made with a spiced coconut “sambal” of sorts, I am ridiculously obsessed with this salad!

  • Samosas – World’s best savoury snack! ( … according to me)

Freshly cooked Palak Paneer in a skillet, ready to be served
Palak Paneer
Indian Cabbage Carrot Salad in a bowl, ready to be tossed
Thoran-style Indian Cabbage Salad
Samosas on a plate with tamarind dipping sauce
Samosas

Watch how to make it

This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!

Cookbook typo (it’s ok!): The recipe in the cookbook and here on this website lists 30g/2tbsp melted ghee/butter in the ingredients. But the cookbook omitted to say that the butter should be added into the dough with the egg. I freaked out when I found this and immediately made the dough without the butter. It worked – so it’s ok! I couldn’t even tell the butter was missing. So if you remember to add it, great. If not, don’t worry! (And sorreeee….. but I’m only human. Also comforting to know this is the only instruction/ingredient typo found and it’s not a big deal!!)

Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Brushing melted garlic butter on a freshly cooked naan

Naan recipe – fluffy, bubbly, chewy!

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 10 minutes mins
Dough rising:: 2 hours hrs
Breads, Sides
Indian
4.98 from 362 votes
Servings6
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. This is a recipe for naan bread that's fluffy, bubbly and chewy, just as it should be. Nobody will ever mistake this for just another basic flatbread! Perfect for slopping up your favourite Indian curries – yet so good that you'll happily devour it plain, straight out of the skillet.
Bearing in mind that we aren't cooking in nuclear-level 480°C hot tandoors, see in post for background notes on how I find this recipe to most closely replicates restaurant naan.
Makes: 6 naans, ~15-16cm / 6 – 7" diameter. For more Indian recipes, browse the Indian collection.

Ingredients

  • 1 tsp instant / rapid rise yeast (Note 1)
  • 1/2 cup warm tap water (~40°C/105°F in temperature)
  • 1 tbsp white sugar
  • 2 tbsp milk , full fat (low fat ok too)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp whisked egg , at room temp (around 1/2 an egg, Note 2)
  • 1/2 tsp salt , cooking / kosher
  • 1 3/4 cups bread flour , or all-purpose/plain (Note 3)
  • 30g / 2 tbsp ghee or unsalted butter , melted (Note 4)

Finishes:

  • 30g / 2 tbsp tbsp ghee or butter , melted (Note 4)
  • 1 small garlic clove , for Garlic Butter option (Note 5)
  • Nigella seeds
  • Coriander/cilantro , finely chopped

Cheese Naan:

  • Shredded cheese (for cheese naan) – Monterey Jack, cheddar, tasty, colby, anything that melts (shred yourself) (Note 6)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Bloom yeast: Mix yeast with warm water and sugar in a small bowl. Cover with cling wrap, leave for 10 minutes until foamy.
  • Egg and milk: Whisk milk and egg together.
  • Flour: Sift flour and salt into a separate bowl.
  • Add wet ingredients: Make a well in the flour, add yeast mixture, and butter and egg mixture. Mix together with a spatula. Once the flour is mostly incorporated, switch to your hands and bring it together into a ball. No kneading is required.
  • Proof 1: Cover the bowl with cling-wrap, then leave in a warm place for 1 – 1.5 hrs until it doubles in size. (Note 7)
  • Cut into 6 pieces: Place the dough on a lightly floured surface. Cut into 6 equal pieces, then shape into balls into spheres with a smooth surface by stretching the surface and tucking it under (see video).
  • Proof 2: Place balls on a lightly-floured tray or plate. Sprinkle lightly with flour, cover loosely with a lightweight tea towel. Put in a warm place to rise for 15 minutes until it increases in size by about 50%.
  • Roll out: Place a round on a lightly-floured work surface, flatten with your hand. Roll out into 3 – 4mm / 0.12 – 0.16" thick rounds (about 16cm / 6.5" wide).
  • Heat skillet: Rub a cast iron skillet with a very light coat of oil using 1/2 tsp oil on a paper towl (unless already well seasoned). Set over high heat until you see wisps of smoke. (Note 8 for other pans)
  • Cook naan: Place a naan dough in the skillet and cook for 1 to 1 1/2 minutes until the underside is deep golden / slightly charred – the surface should get bubbly. Flip then cook the other side for 1 minute until the bubbles become deep golden brown.
  • Cook remaining naan: Remove, set aside, and repeat with remaining naan, taking care to regulate the heat of the skillet so it doesn't get too hot.
  • Finishing: Brush freshly cooked naan with melted butter or ghee (or garlic butter, Note 5). Sprinkle with nigella seeds and coriander. Serve hot!

Cheese Naan:

  • Roll out a naan per above directions. Brush with plain butter or garlic butter. (Note 5) Place a mound of cheese in the middle – about 1/4 cup, lightly-packed. Bundle it up, money bag-style, then twist to seal.
  • Turn upside down so the smooth side is up. Roll out to 6-7mm / 1/4" thick rounds.
  • Heat a well-seasoned cast iron skillet preheated over high heat, but not until the skillet is smoking. Cook naan for around 1 1/2 minutes on the first side until golden – it will puff up! Turn and cook the other side for around 45 seconds.

Recipe Notes:

1. Yeast – This recipe works with dry active yeast too, but the naan is not quite as soft. Follow recipe as written, including yeast quantity. Also note, rapid-rise/instant yeast normally does not need to activated in warm water but it’s a very specific step for this recipe because it yields a softer naan than adding the instant yeast directly into the dough. (Yes, we made a LOT of naan to try out all the various combinations to figure out the best one!).
2. Egg – I know this sounds strange, but we need 1/2 a large egg for one batch of this naan! Any more and it dries out the inside too much.
Just crack an egg in a bowl, whisk, then measure out 1 1/2 tbsp. OR just make a double batch of this naan so you can use one whole egg!
3. Flour – Bread flour makes the softest, fluffiest naan. But all-purpose/plain flour is very nearly as good. I wouldn’t make a special trip to the supermarket just to get bread flour. But if you’ve got it, use it!
4. Ghee is clarified butter, one of the traditional fats used in Indian cooking. It is simply butter without the water and milk solids, so you have pure butter fat. It has a more intense flavour than butter. Either buy it, make it (it’s easy and keeps for months) or just use normal butter!
5. Garlic butter: Place 2 tbsp/30g salted butter or ghee and 1/2 tsp crushed garlic* in a small bowl. Microwave until butter has melted (do it in bursts so it doesn’t explode!!). Stand for a couple of minutes to let the garlic flavour infuse before using.
* Garlic crushed using a garlic crusher or microplane
6. Cheese – Any melting cheese works fine here, though bear in mind if you use mozzarella it doesn’t have much flavour. Monterey Jack is a good option that has flavour and stretches nicely!
7. How to promote dough rising – One of my favourite places to proof dough is in my dryer!!! Draught proof, easy to heat up a small space. Just run it for a couple of minutes, put the bowl in, close the door and leave it. Just don’t turn it on!
8. Cooking pan – If you don’t have a cast iron pan, you can use another type of skillet. Pour 1/2 tsp oil on a paper towel then lightly rub the base. DO NOT use a non-stick pan – the high heat required to properly cook naan will destroy the non-stick coating!
Here is the cast iron skillet I use – it’s a Lodge (excellent value, indestructible!)
9. Make ahead naan – A last-minute discovery was that naan is great for making ahead! In fact, the bread flavour improves overnight, which is typical of most breads.
Make the dough up to the end of Step 5 – Proof 1. Then after the dough has doubled in size, put the bowl with the dough it in the fridge overnight (I’ve done 24 hours). Do not punch dough down or touch it – just put it in as is. The fridge stops the dough from rising any further.
Take the bowl out of the fridge at least a couple of hours before cooking. We need to take the fridge chill out of it completely otherwise the dough won’t rise for Proof #2 (Step 6). Cut into 6 pieces, then proceed with recipe from Step 6 onwards. 
10. Nutrition per naan – Excludes extra ghee or butter brushed on top (and certainly excluding the cheese –  I have not control over how much you choose to stuff it with!)

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 223cal (11%)Carbohydrates: 29g (10%)Protein: 5g (10%)Fat: 10g (15%)Saturated Fat: 6g (38%)Trans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 36mg (12%)Sodium: 277mg (12%)Potassium: 53mg (2%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 2g (2%)Vitamin A: 287IU (6%)Vitamin C: 1mg (1%)Calcium: 17mg (2%)Iron: 1mg (6%)
Keywords: Naan recipe
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

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835 Comments

  1. Ellie says

    October 21, 2023 at 12:16 am

    5 stars
    These are fantastic. I was a bit on a time crunch so I wasn’t able to do the second proof but they still turned out fantastic.

    Reply
  2. Mark says

    October 20, 2023 at 3:59 am

    Haven’t tried the recipe yet, but the paint brush in the lead picture is a DISGUSTING, crusty, rusty mess. It isn’t food grade, and I’ll bet the area under the metal ferrule is packed with old ick that you can’t even reach to clean. Don’t substitute construction tools for kitchenware.

    Reply
  3. Maria Allam says

    October 13, 2023 at 4:21 pm

    5 stars
    So perfect 🥰
    Great naan recipe
    Thank you

    Reply
  4. Mike says

    October 8, 2023 at 8:08 pm

    Made your naan recipe and they were fantastic. Great recipe which will certainly be used again.
    Found the naans were better if left after rolling out ( stage 8 ) for 5 minutes to recover.

    Reply
  5. Taylorjay says

    October 5, 2023 at 2:12 am

    I’m not sure if I’m just stupid, but it doesn’t say how much of anything is supposed to be used?

    Some recipes say 300g flour and some 540g but this says absolutely nothing other than what ingredients and when to mix them?

    Reply
    • Althea says

      October 22, 2023 at 11:39 am

      5 stars
      Taylorjay: Go to the very top of this recipe page. You will see 3 buttons RECIPE VIDEO and DOZER. Click on the RECIPE button and it will automatically take you straight to the recipe with all the ingredient amounts listed.
      Hope this helps you.

      Reply
  6. Lauren V says

    September 30, 2023 at 12:02 pm

    5 stars
    Made this tonight for the first time without the butter by mistake and still turned out great! I still buttered the top but no butter in the dough. Very happy with this recipe. Thank you for sharing❤️

    Reply
  7. Shaun says

    September 30, 2023 at 2:35 am

    In the UK we don’t use cups what’s the measurements in grammes which is more accurate

    Reply
    • Anna says

      October 31, 2023 at 3:48 pm

      Hi Shaun,
      On the left hand side of the recipe, at the start, you can convert the measurements to suit you. Hope this helps.

      Reply
    • Jake says

      October 17, 2023 at 7:35 pm

      Click the Metric option.

      Reply
  8. kim says

    September 29, 2023 at 1:24 am

    5 stars
    I did not have yogurt for my usual naan recipe so tried this. They came out soft and delicious. I let the dough rise about an hour and a half before making. We will do these again.

    Reply
  9. Brooke says

    September 26, 2023 at 11:06 am

    5 stars
    It comes out perfect every time!

    Reply
  10. Helen says

    September 23, 2023 at 12:55 am

    Tried this and followed the recipe to a T. Unfortunately it didn’t turn out the way it should have. After adding the wet ingredients it so wet I had to add more flour to be able to handle it.

    Reply
  11. Damo says

    September 16, 2023 at 3:14 pm

    5 stars
    These were fantastic!

    If anyone is cooking in a high temp pizza oven that can reach 400-500c, leave the egg out.

    Only leave the egg in for stovetop cooking.

    Reply
  12. Nicholas says

    September 14, 2023 at 7:50 pm

    Wow! A quick naan that doesn’t require Greek Yoghurt. Turn your griddle to medium/medium high and go from there. Think of this like pancakes, the first one is always rubbish then the rest are perfected. I did get little sweetness to the naan, however with butter and garlic and a pinch more salt (which I rarely use) this hits the spot with this beautiful paneer masala curry! Another 5* recipe from Nagi!

    Reply
  13. Lucilla Sinanian says

    September 14, 2023 at 7:18 pm

    Awesome family loving all your bread. I am a qualified cordon bleu cook bread never came as something I wanted to do. You have changed my mind. Artisan and flat bread staple now naan. If I can impress my Armenian husband who makes Lebanese bread I’m on a winner. Thanks heaps

    Reply
  14. lauren says

    September 9, 2023 at 10:47 am

    5 stars
    set off the smoke detectors but tasted good.

    Reply
  15. Rose says

    September 7, 2023 at 12:05 pm

    5 stars
    Never again will I buy Naan…these are the best and very easy to make!

    Reply
  16. Joan says

    September 1, 2023 at 12:48 pm

    I am writing this with my mouth full of warm, buttery, soft-yet-crisp, stretchy, FLAVORFUL naan. I think I heated my cast iron griddle a little too high, because the first couple had spots that were deep, deep golden brown. (Not burned, as my children claimed!) After I turned the heat down, they turned out beautifully, puffing up on the griddle like little aromatic balloons. Wonderful recipe. Thank you, Nagi.

    Reply
  17. Sandrareed booker says

    August 31, 2023 at 9:12 am

    Hi! U stated to mix egg with milk, on the step by step don’t mention the butter, until mix ingredients you stated add the egg and butter mixture. So it’s not the milk and egg that I mix together?? It’s eggs and butter?? Can u please let me know or maybe I’m missing something but let me know

    Reply
  18. Carly says

    August 28, 2023 at 2:38 pm

    5 stars
    I’ve tried a few naan recipes and this was by far the absolute best! So delicious and light and fluffy! I mixed cilantro and garlic into the dough and also spread the garlic butter on top after cooking. So so good!

    Reply
  19. Kristy says

    August 25, 2023 at 11:01 pm

    5 stars
    This turned out great everybody loved it!

    Reply
  20. aysha says

    August 25, 2023 at 7:59 am

    i made these today and i have to say they turned out amazing !!! so soft ,i followed the recipe to a T and everyone was wowed!!!

    Reply
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I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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