Breaking bread
KARACHI: Mohammad Ishaq has been kneading dough for over 40 years now, and he does it with his hands. Almost buried in it up to his elbows in a big metal bowl he looks shocked and a little disgusted, too, not to mention offended, when I tell him that I thought the kneading was done with the feet at tandoors.
“Look, sister, whatever goes into the mouth the feet better not touch. It will be sacrilege if it did,” he says, touching his ears. “Tauba, tauba ...” Some dough is also on his ears now.
At the tandoor, there is also one person to make small balls of the dough, another to roll it out on a flat surface to make circles and yet another to bend over and reach inside and stick it to the walls of the cylindrical oven, or tandoor.
Ishaq says that the dough for preparing naan is usually not used for making thin chapatti. “For that you use chakki atta. It is pure wholegrain flour, not bleached white maida made from refined grain,” he says. “And there is no baking soda and yeast added to it for raising or fluffing up the batter.”