Both very useful suggestions but I sort of fail to see the point about adding 
fat and starch to something that you’re supposed to eat to produce weight loss ☺

--srs

On 08/08/16, 1:35 PM, "silklist on behalf of Simmi Sareen" 
<[email protected] on behalf of 
[email protected]> wrote:

    On Mon, Aug 8, 2016 at 1:02 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian <[email protected]>
    wrote:
    
    >
    > Adding them to dosa batter, roti dough and such tends to be an experiment
    > that goes wrong very easily – and you just have to eat them hot, can’t 
even
    > pack them in a kid’s lunchbox or they turn into shoe leather in very short
    > order.
    >
    >
    I have a friend who regularly brings soft textured millet flatbreads for
    lunch at work. Apart from the usual 'add oil/ghee to the dough and while
    cooking' tip, there are two tricks I learnt from her that make for millet
    rotis behaving for several hours:
    1. Try a dough with equal quantities of millet and rice flours, kneaded
    with warm water
    2. Add a boiled, mashed potato per cup of dough. You are adding both starch
    and moisture this way, making for a much better texture.
    
    Simmi
    




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