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ALOO WALA PARATHA FLATBREAD

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Andyman
view post Posted on 24/10/2013, 08:53




www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJ-qWHTqmp8

A paratha/parantha/parauntha is a flatbread that originated in the Indian Subcontinent. It is still quite prevalent throughout the area. Parantha is an amalgamation of the words parat and atta which literally means layers of cooked dough. In Burma, it is known as palata (pronounced: [pəlàtà]), while it is known as farata in Mauritius and the Maldives. However, in areas of the Punjabi region, it is referred to as prontha or parontay.

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nel video ci sono la preparazione (e gli ingredienti) della Paratha


It is one of the most popular unleavened flat breads in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent and is made by pan frying whole wheat dough on a tava. The parantha dough usually contains ghee or cooking oil which is also layered on the freshly prepared paratha. Paranthas are usually stuffed with boiled potatoes (as in aloo ka parantha), leaf vegetables, radishes, cauliflower, and/or paneer (Indian-style cheese). A parantha (especially a stuffed one) can be eaten simply with a pat of butter spread on top, with chutney, pickles, and yogurt, or with meat or vegetable curries. Some roll the parantha into a tube and eat it with tea, often dipping the parantha.

The parantha can be round, heptagonal, square, or triangular. When it is round, the stuffing is mixed with the kneaded flour, and the parantha is prepared in the same way as roti, but in the latter two forms, the peda (ball of kneaded flour) is flattened into a circle, the stuffing is kept in the middle, and the flatbread is closed around the stuffing like an envelope. The latter two also vary in that they have discernible soft layers, with one "opening" to the crispier shell layers.
The Paratha is an important part of a traditional South Asian breakfast. Traditionally, it is made using ghee but oil is also used. Some people may even bake it in the oven for health reasons. Usually the paratha is eaten with dollops of white butter on top of it. Sides which go very well with paratha are curd, fried egg, omelette, Qeema (Ground beef cooked with vegetable and spices), Nihari (a beef dish), zeera aloo (potatoes lightly fried with cumin seeds), daal, and raita as part of a breakfast meal. It may be stuffed with potatoes, paneer, onions, qeema or chili peppers.

Some sources claim that Parantha originated from ancient Vedic times. The word paratha originated from the Vedic Sanskrit word पुरोढाशम् (pu-ro-dhaa-sham) (purodhasha). Purodhasha's are offered to the fire god during Yajna, Yagna or Homa ceremonies. Vedic purodhashas are usually stuffed with ingredients like powdered lentils and chopped vegetables.[citation needed]

The Southern Indian version is called Parotta.

Indian immigrants took this dish to Malaysia, Mauritius (where it is known as farata), and Singapore, resulting in variations such as roti canai and roti prata. In Myanmar (Burma), where it is known as palata, it is eaten with curries or cooked with either egg or mutton, or as a dessert with white sugar. Htat ta ya ("a hundred layers") is a fried, flaky multi-layered paratha with either sugar or boiled peas (pè byouk).


paratha490x500

Edited by Andyman - 24/10/2013, 20:28
 
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Martina75
view post Posted on 24/10/2013, 10:01




....c'e qualcosa che non va........ :;pns;:

e' scritto tutto in inglese e al posto della foto vedo un enorme divieto..... :;spr;:
 
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view post Posted on 24/10/2013, 13:32
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quello che posso dirvi è che fare la paratha è veramene un casino....io nonostante sia stata a scuola da Redi non ci sono riuscita, sono venute buone, ma non come dovevano essere.... :;spr;:
 
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Andyman
view post Posted on 24/10/2013, 19:24




CITAZIONE (Martina75 @ 24/10/2013, 11:01) 
....c'e qualcosa che non va........ :;pns;:

e' scritto tutto in inglese e al posto della foto vedo un enorme divieto..... :;spr;:

la foto adesso la sistemo.

Per la ricetta metti il traduttore e poi segui il video :lo:
 
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Martina75
view post Posted on 24/10/2013, 19:34




BONEEEEEEEEE!!!!....... :man: :man:


Una volta alle Maldive fecero la zuppa di pesce e le paratha.......io mangiai solo quelle,niente zuppa..... :rir: :ok:
 
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view post Posted on 24/10/2013, 21:04
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fatte sicuramente da Redi...... :sisi: :sisi: :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;:

P.S. è OT.....ma, per chi lo conosce.....Redi in India ha fatto lo chef per 14 anni.....ecco perché è cpsì bravo a fare paratha e curry..... :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;:
 
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Martina75
view post Posted on 25/10/2013, 10:56




Redi santo subito................. :all;: :all;: :all;: :all;: :all;:

che persona squisita e' Redi,mai invadente sempre molto educato e gentile,sempre sorridente,sempre disponibile...... :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;:
 
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Andyman
view post Posted on 25/10/2013, 10:58




quest'anno, rispetto all'anno scorso, era anche scatenato con il boduberu.

L'unica cosa passabile del boduberu di quest'anno è stato redi che ballava :rir: :rir: :rir: :app;:
 
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Martina75
view post Posted on 25/10/2013, 11:00




:no: ...non lo so se reggerei....... :rir:
 
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Andyman
view post Posted on 25/10/2013, 11:10




...ho infatti detto che era l'unica cosa passabile r3 r2 imd
 
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view post Posted on 25/10/2013, 14:10
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CITAZIONE (Andyman @ 25/10/2013, 11:58) 
quest'anno, rispetto all'anno scorso, era anche scatenato con il boduberu.

L'unica cosa passabile del boduberu di quest'anno è stato redi che ballava :rir: :rir: :rir: :app;:

Redi è unico.... :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;: :app;:
 
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