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Chapati

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Chapati or chapatti (Marathi: पोळी Hindi: चपाती, Urdu: چپاتی, IPA: [tʃəpɑt̪i]) is a type of roti or Indian bread eaten in South Asia and East Africa. In many areas of South Asia, particularly the north of the subcontinent, and in East Africa, it is the staple food. It is made from a dough of atta flour (whole grain durum wheat), water and salt by rolling the dough out into discs of approximately twelve centimeters in diameter and browning the discs on both sides on a very hot, dry tava or frying pan (preferably not one coated with Teflon or other nonstick material). If the chapati is held for about half a second directly into an open flame, causing it to puff up with steam like a balloon, it becomes the Gujrathi and Punjabi phulka. The steaming (ballooning) step can also be achieved by placing the chapati in a microwave oven for five to ten seconds. However, because microwave cooking can cause the chapati to become soggy, a heated grill or open gas flame is recommended.

Image:Baking Chapatis.jpg
An Indian girl baking chapatis.

Often, the finished chapatis are brushed with ghee (clarified butter). Variations include replacing part of the wheat flour with pearl millet (bajra) or maize (makka) or (jowar) flour. The chapatis are then referred to in Hindi as bajra roti or makke ki roti and in Marathi bhakri. When a mixture of pearl millet, maize and gram flour is used, the chapati is called a missi roti. In the southern and eastern parts, one cannot have that option for all the terms roti, chapati, paratha or kulcha would imply majorly, if not exclusively maida contents. In some parts of Maharashtra, chapati is called poli. In Gujarat and Punjab it is called rotli or phulka.

Chapatis are usually eaten with cooked dal (lentil soup) or vegetable (Indian curry) dishes, and pieces of the chapati are used to wrap around and pick up each bite of the cooked dish.

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Indian cuisine
Preparation techniques and cooking items

Utensils

Regional cuisines
North India

PunjabiUttar Pradeshi
RajasthaniMughlai -
PahadiBhojpuri
BenarasiBihari
Kashmiri

South India

KeralaTamil
AndhraKarnataka
Hyderabadi-Mangalorean

East India

BengaliOriya

North-East India

SikkimeseAssamese
TripuriNaga

West India

GoanGujarati
Maharashtrian/Marathi
Malvani/KonkaniParsi

Other

Indian ChineseNepali
HistoryJain (Satvika)
Anglo-IndianSindhi
ChettinadUdupi
Fast food

Ingredients and types of food

Main dishes
Sweets and desserts
Drinks
Snacks
Spices
Condiments

See also:

Indian chefs
Cookbook: Cuisine of India

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Size

  • Chapati sizes vary depending on region and change slightly from kitchen to kitchen. In general, an Indian chapati is approximately ten inches in diameter, while in Pakistan a chapati or roti is much larger, usually 12-15 inches in diameter.
  • In some regions of India, a chapati can be less than five centimeters in diameter.

See also


External links


de:Chapati

es:Chapati fr:Chapati hi:रोटी it:Chapati he:צ'פאטי sw:Chapati ml:ചപ്പാത്തി mr:पोळी ja:チャパティ nn:Chapati pl:Ćapati sv:Chapati ta:சப்பாத்தி

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