Naan, the hand-stretched Indian flatbread that’s baked in a
traditional tandoori oven, seems to be the fashionable carbo-slice of the
moment. Once only available at
ethnic markets and curry palaces, it’s now showing up in ordinary supermarkets
and even in the bread baskets of Contemporary American Cuisine eateries.
Last night I was playing with a package of Whole Foods brand
“365” Whole Wheat Tandoori Naan and I stumbled upon a wildly flavorful,
wonderfully healthy take on panini – naanini.
The “365” bread has impressive flavor --- it’s tangy, with
subtle “charred” undertones. The
surface is attractively bubbled, blistered and slightly charred. The
nutritional profile – stone ground whole wheat flour, a bit of buttermilk, soybean
oil, wheat bran and a few other ingredients – makes it superior to the
white bread usually involved in panini.
Naan is easy to use and very versatile. No fancy-schmancy
panini machines needed. Just toss a slab on the backyard grill or a stove-top
grill pan. Add a topping and either fold over or eat as is. Part pita, part
pizza, part panino…totally satisfying.
Last night I used a stove-top grill pan, lightly brushed with
peanut oil so I could get it extremely hot before adding the flatbread (other
oils would smoke sooner). I flipped the bread a few times, lifting it off when
the natural “char” was slightly darkened, and the rich, tangy smell drove me
crazy. I then added some shaved Italian fontina cheese, which has a natural
affinity with the tangy whole wheat bread.
(This remarkable cheese comes from the Val D’Aosta of
notthern Italy. It’s an intense cow’s milk cheese with a nutty, herbaceous flavor that's quite pungent. Fontina is also made in Denmark, Sweden and France, but
those versions have none of the Italian cheese’s deep and pronounced flavor. It’s
available at cheese shops, gourmet markets and at Amazon.com.
Fifteen seconds under the broiler and I had a new love.
This morning I discovered the virtues of leftover naanini. I
slid the leftover, fontina-topped slices back under the broiler for 15 seconds,
then plopped Stonewall Kitchens’ Tangerine Marmalade atop the bubbling cheese.
Outtasite.
I just discovered your blog and I'm so glad I found it. We too just love this Naan bread. I use it to make Jacques Pepin's smoked salmon pizza and we always get raves. We also make simple pizzas with this great little bread. I keep a package in the refrigerator and use it often.
Sam
Posted by: My Carolina Kitchen | January 10, 2010 at 05:28 AM
Re: [Matters of Taste] My Carolina Kitchen submitted a comment to New Sandwiches in Town: Naanini
A Naanini with smoked salmon?? What a great idea. Thanks for the comment and the inspiration.
Posted by: Maureen Clancy | January 10, 2010 at 01:10 PM