Poori
- 2 cups chapati flour or whole-wheat pastry flour
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon olive or canola oil for the dough plus more for deep-frying and rubbing on dough
- About 1 cup milk or water
- Put the flour and salt into a bowl.
- Dribble in the 1 tablespoon oil and rub it into the flour.
- Slowly add enough milk or water so you can gather all the dough together into a ball.
- Knead the dough for 10 minutes until smooth.
- Make a ball.
- Rub the ball with a little oil and slip it into a Ziploc or other plastic bag and leave for 30 minutes.
- Pour oil for deep-frying into a wok, karhai, or frying pan and set on medium heat.
- In a wok or karhai, the oil should extend over a diameter of at least 6 inches.
- In a frying pan, you will need at least 1 inch of oil.
- Allow it time to heat up.
- Keep a large baking tray lined with paper towels next to you.
- Meanwhile knead the dough again and divide it into 12 balls.
- Keep 11 covered.
- Take the twelfth ball and rub it lightly with oil.
- Now flatten it into a patty and roll it out into a 55 1/2-inch round.
- Lift the round and fearlessly lay it on top of the hot oil without allowing it to fold up.
- It may sink, but should rise to the surface almost immediately.
- Now, using the back of a slotted spoon, keep pushing the poori under the surface of the oil with rapid, light strokes.
- It will resist and puff up in seconds.
- Turn it over and count to 2.
- Now lift the poori out of the oil and deposit it on top of the paper towels.
- Make all the pooris this way.
- Stack and cover tightly in foil if not eating right away.
chapati flour, salt, olive, milk
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/poori-373874 (may not work)