Recipes>Biscuit Recipes

Saffron Nan Khatai

by Anisa Karolia from The Ramadan Cookbook

Easy

Makes 30

Total 42min

Prep 30min

Cook 12min

These crumbly, buttery cookies are delicately flavoured with saffron and cardamom.

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From crowd-pleasing mains to colourful desserts

From the book

The Ramadan Cookbook

Anisa Karolia

The Ramadan Cookbook

80 recipes for celebrating Ramadan and beyond

From filling ideas for suhoor to satisfying dishes for iftar

An essential resource for anyone observing Ramadan

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Introduction

Nan khatai is a traditional Indian shortbread and my absolute fave! When I was growing up, my mum would make a huge batch of these for Eid – the aroma of freshly baked Nan Khatai would fill the house. The name comes from the Persian word naan which means ‘bread’, and khatai which means ‘light and flaky’. Typically made with ghee, flour, sugar and cardamom, these are crisp and crumbly on the outside with a slight chewiness in the middle. A perfect sweet treat for special occasions.

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Ingredients

125gcaster sugar
125gghee
4 tbspoil
1 tspsaffron threads
1 tspground cardamom
1 tbspfine semolina
125gground almonds
1 tbspchickpea flour
½ tspbaking powder
¼ tspbicarbonate of soda
about 280gplain flour
For the decoration:
glacé cherries
chopped almonds
pistachios
dried rose petals

Method

Preheat the oven to 160°C (gas mark 3) and line a baking tray with baking paper.

Place the sugar and ghee in a bowl and use a whisk to cream them together for 2–3 minutes until light and fluffy. Add the oil and whisk for a further 40 seconds.

Place the saffron threads in a small frying pan on a very low heat and warm through, taking care as the strands burn easily. When slightly crisp, crush with the back of a spoon and add to the creamed mixture with the ground cardamom to give both aromatic and sweet spicy flavour.

Add the semolina and ground almonds to provide a crunchy and crisp texture, and the chickpea flour for a slight nutty taste. Add the baking powder and bicarbonate of soda to add a little rise and some cracks on top of the shortbread during baking – that’s when you know you have a good Nan Khatai. Finally, add just enough flour to make a soft and pliable dough.

Roll the dough into small balls, about 3.5cm across, and place on the prepared baking tray, spacing them a little apart as they do spread during baking. Decorate them with glacé cherries, chopped almonds, pistachios or dried rose petals, then cook in the oven for 12 minutes. They will crack slightly on top as they bake and turn lightly golden. Leave to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes to firm up slightly, then cool completely on a wire rack. Store in an airtight container in a cool place for up to 2–3 weeks.

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Ingredients
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