Recipes>Pea Recipes

Mattar Paratha (Paratha Stuffed with Peas)

by Asma Khan from Ammu: Indian Home-Cooking To Nourish Your Soul

Serves 8

Asma Khan’s pillowy paratha are stuffed with a verdant pea filling. Serve with yoghurt and chutney.

Discover more delicious Eid recipes

From crowd-pleasing mains to colourful desserts

From the book

Ammu

Asma Khan

Ammu: Indian Home-Cooking To Nourish Your Soul

Over 100 accessible Indian recipes from Asma Khan

Vibrant inspiration for every occasion, including celebrations, dinner parties and midweek meals

From curries to starters, sides, desserts and more

Buy From

Introduction

Learning to make stuffed parathas can be a life-changing skill! Anything from mashed potatoes to minced meat to crumbled paneer can be stuffed inside a paratha to make a satisfying meal, so use this recipe and play around with the stuffings. It is important that the stuffing does not have any sharp bits or rough edges that will tear the paratha when you roll it. I like eating this with yoghurt on the side.

Tags

Ingredients

200gchapati flour (atta/chakki atta) or wholemeal flour
100gplain flour, plus extra for dusting
1 tspsalt
about 200mlwarm water
120gshelled peas
1green chilli, finely chopped (optional)
1 tbspchopped fresh coriander
3 tbspmelted ghee or unsalted butter (or vegetable oil)

Method

Mix both the flours in a bowl and add ½ teaspoon of the salt. Make a well in the centre and gradually add the warm water. Knead until you have a soft but pliable dough. Cover the bowl with a damp cloth and set aside for 2 hours.

Boil the peas then drain and mash with the chilli, if using, the coriander and the remaining ½ teaspoon salt. Divide into eight equal portions and set aside.

Divide the dough into eight equal pieces and shape each piece into a ball. On a lightly floured surface, roll out each piece to form a 12cm circle, sprinkling flour over the dough as you roll. Put a portion of the pea mix in the middle of each circle of dough and lift the edges together to form a sack. Seal the tip and shape the dough into a ball again. This time you need to be careful as there is a stuffing inside.

Flatten each stuffed dough ball on the floured surface and gently roll out to make a 15–20cm circle. Do not use pressure while rolling as you don’t want to tear the surface of the parathas. Heat a tawa or frying pan over a low heat. Cook one paratha at a time for 4–5 minutes on each side until golden brown. Drizzle over a little melted ghee, butter or oil as you cook each side. Serve warm.

Pictured with Lal (Red) Chutney (page 34 of Ammu).

Reviews

Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.

Cancel reply

Your review

Name *

Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.

Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .

Be the first to leave a review

Ingredients
Method

More Eid Recipes

View all

Rose and Pistachio Milk Cake

by Anisa Karolia from The Ramadan Cookbook

Saffron Nan Khatai

by Anisa Karolia from The Ramadan Cookbook

More Recipes from Ammu

View all

Malpua: Ghee-fried Pancakes Soaked in Syrup

by Asma Khan from Ammu

Asma Khan’s Aloo Bonde

by Asma Khan from Ammu

More Indian Recipes

View all

Lamb Curry with Mustard Oil, Turmeric, Chilli and Ahuna Masala

by Maunika Gowardhan from Curry: Recipes From Indian Home Kitchens

Shahi Tukda

by Anurag Aggarwal from Indian Made Easy

Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week