Chapathi and Phulkas
Many people had asked me to post ‘how to make soft chapathis and phulkas’. Finally I am here with this post. Those who are expert in chapathi/phulka making, skip this post.
My experience with chapathi/phulka was very bad. When I started cooking, I could never make soft chapathis/phulkas. They used to come out very hard. I still remember one incident that happened in my previous office. There was a bachelor guy, who was very humerous and never missed any chance of pulling my leg. He used to sit beside my desk. One weekend we were working and he said he was very hungry and asked me for my lunch box. Though I warned him about my chapathi, he insisted on eating it. When he tasted it, he said, ‘Shilpa, me isse acha roti bana leta hoon (I can make better chapathis)’. He went on commenting how bad were my chapathis. That was the biggest insult I have ever got. Then he went on telling people about my chapathis. After that I tried and tried and now I can make the perfect soft chapathis.
So here it goes….
Take 2 tbl spoon of water and add 1/2 tea spn salt, add 1 tea spn of oil to make the chapathis soft. Then add wheat flour (1 cup). Mix and gradually add water/flour to make the dough. (Some people make the dough with warm milk to make the chapathi/phulkas soft). Now apply 1-2 tea spns of oil to the dough. Keep it aside for around 30 mins to 1hr.

(Chapathis/phulkas can also be made without milk and oil. But I usually add oil, have not tried milk any time. My mom makes very soft chapathis without oil and milk. She just keeps the dough for around 1hr before making chapathis/phulkas).
Most important thing to make them soft is
- Dough should not be very hard
- Leaving the dough for 1hr before making the chapathis/phulkas
- Frying of the chapathis/phulkas make a lot of difference. So I have taken the pictures of each step.
- Do not leave chapathis for longer time on the tava, so use hot tava for frying.
- Once fried, stack the chapathis/phulkas one above the other and immediately close the lid. This keeps them hot and soft. The chapathis/phulkas which are down in the stack are more softer. So reverse the stack after some time, so that the topmost becomes the bottommost. This way all the chapathis remain soft.
Chapathi:
Usually for chapathi, the dough is made into a small puri, ghee is added in the between and folded into triangular shape and then again rolled to make chapathi. This procedure makes the chapathis more soft. Usually chapathis are more thicker than phulkas(it is not a hard and fast rule).




Take extra care while frying them. Heat the tava to very hot. Then keep the chapathi. Turn it when you can see it fried from down.


Fry on second side then turn and fry.
Then turn again ie, each side should be fried twice to make sure it is fried properly. (At the max turn it thrice, if it is turned again and again, chapathis become hard). Then apply ghee. (Unlike phulka, chapathis are fried completely on tava, but phulkas are fried on tava and then on direct flame).

Phulkas:
Roll the dough as thin as possible (no folding).
Keep the tava on hot tava and reduce the flame. When you can see just white patches, turn it (chapathi should be fried as more as possible during each turn, but for phulkas, the side should be fried only a little on tava, see the below pictures).


Turn and then fry on the second side.
This side should be fried a bit more than on the first side, it should be almost fried from this side).
Now on a high flame, keep the phulka on direct flame (first side down).

Within one minute the phulka puffs. Slowly remove the phulka from the flame.
PS: I normally use 1 cup water to 1 and 3/4 cup to 2 cups flour. This is approximation only. If you feel your dough is too soft and you can’t roll it, add little more flour. I use Pillsbury chukky fresh atta which gives very soft chapathis.
If none of the above things work, try making them like jolad rotti here by cooking the dough. This method is guaranteed to work.

Hi Shilpa,
firstly, i love the detailed steps in your page!
i tried the steps above, but i think there’s something wrong with my tava? i had to flour the chapati so it wouldnt stick to the board when i was rolling it. so the excess flour on the chapati gets burnt on the tava. what should i do?
Brenda, do not apply too much flour while rolling it. If you have made the dough very soft, then only this problem comes. I use 1 cup water to 1 and 3/4th cup flour. After you make every chapathi, wipe the tava with a paper towel, if you feel there is burnt flour on tava. Yes, tava does make difference. I bought one in Walmart few months ago, and it starts a big smoke when I try to use it.
ok, thanks shilpa! i’ll give it another try. i think my dough was too soft.
Thank you very much for nice chapatis I had the same problem for making them soft now with you step by step I can make family ejoyful. Thanks once again.
wow, just what I am looking for, great tip & photograph. Will try keeping the dough for 1 hour and make the tava HOT. Thanks !!!
I have couple of suggestions on Chapati/Phulkas (C/P).
Being Mumbaikar(Bombayite), I grew up with C/P as during those days my parents used to get wheat/rice on ration cards only (during/after WW II and independanc)); that is why ration card was like modern Driver’s License in US for identification purpose in Mumbai even to get bottled milk from Aarey Colony and to get Kerosene in those shortage days.
As I had noticed, Gujerati and Maharashtrian house wives are experts in cranking out 100’s of Phulkas in minutes and eating those Phulkas as comes off from Sagadi(Indian Charcoal burner, and not gas stove like in US), serving immediately.Eating with Daal or any Subjee(Veggie curries)is more enjoyable than one (or restaurant)who prepares a stack of Phulkas and then serve everybody later. Similarly, most Konkani(or South Indian) Mom, or sister or wife has been credited for making Dosa one at a time (rather than a stack) and serving to their guests or family members or Hubby and derive pleasure or satisfaction that they get flattered(in true sense!)and get pat on the back for well-done job.
So, the point is Phulkas you can enjoy more when one person makes one at time and other person starts eating it. There are still few old fashioned specially Gujearati restaurants in Bhuleshwar and Girgaum area of Mumbai, where I used to eat unlimited lunch for 3 or 4 Anas(One ruppee is 16 Anas)with garam garam (hot from oven)phulkas with daal and one subjee. Even now , every time I visit Mumbai, I visit one or two such restaurants(now lunch is over Rs.80, and it is still a bargain though!!) and try to escape from Konkani food prepared by Aunties or Vanhis(Bhabhi) or sister.
I have learnt by experience here in US that,you can buy semi-readymade thin chapati pack from Indian store or Mexican whole wheat (one brand is Guerraro) and enjoy youself 80-90% like Phulkas two ways. One is of course directly on the fire with your expert palm finger (or pair of ice tongs)in quickly rotating fashion; and second method is on the cast iron tava(flat pan) and tapping gently on the roti 3-4 places by SS spatula(Kailato)while it is being grilled without ghee, and boy, it rises like full blown puri.Initially you might have to play around a little bit until you get proper skill and hang of it.
hi shilpa, Could you tell me how to make longlasting chaptis. I am a student and when I come back from university, sometimes I dont have the mood to make chapatis.yet I love chapatis, and cant live without it for long.
Here, in Malaysia we get instant chapatis and paratas from shops, which we just have to cook over tavaa.
But it could not beat the homemade ones.
Is there special way to make the dough, roll it and keep in the freezer , to be fried/cooked whenever I want.
Great explannation indeed..Really helpful for beginners!!
Hello, very helpful tips on chapati thanks. I am in New Zealand making idlis and chapati and was wondering if rice-based and wheat-based breads are completely seperate in Indian tradition. Are there any breads (or roti?) which include both rice and wheat flours? Thanks,
Daniel Munn
dmun023@wrexham.net
Auckland, NZ
Hi Shilpa..
Just looked in to ur site the other day and tried u r phulka’s.For the first time it came out so well..My hubby just loved it..Thanks a lot
Shilpa,
i m very glad u posted chapati-phulka wt great efforts – snaps+elaborate expln+tips! amazing girl u r!!! i hv tried making these and not only r they soft after making,stay soft next day too..(since i had made too many)
i m still having phobia of phulkas (having burnt them earlier), but ur chapathi, puri recipes hv been a huge hit wt me & family so i shall surely try ur way of making phulkas too!
hi shilpa,
great.wonderful.previously i used to get hard chapathis.i was almost fed up with them.i thought i will never get soft chapathis.But you procedure has made it possible.Your step by step procedure with pictures is very nice.thanks a lot.i made the chapathis in your method and they turned out very soft.thanks alot.very helpful website.
This was great… I made chappatis twice and they came out soft and delicious. I used the mixie version… thanks, very helpful.
Hi,
Even though I’ve made chappatis off and on for past 6 years I’ve neer perfected it. I plan on trying the exact proportions mentioned in your site. I really, really hope this works.
Thanks,
SV
hi shilpa,
I am very new to ur site.i enjoy going thru it almost daily now.hope i too start making soft phulkas with ur tips given…very helpful indeed.
Hi Shilpa,
just like almost every1 out here trying out their hands at chapati makin. me too had a fair share of hard knockin chapati experience. looking at your recipe & comments,i’m gonna try out my hands again after a very long time. after trying your recipe, i’ll leave comments. thanks a million…
Hi Shilpa,
tried the recipe as mentioned and it turned out perfect and soft. recieved praises from my sis…hmmm…yummy…turned out excellent. thanks a million…
however, would like to add a comment. i used warm water to knead the dough but the dough was very sticky and even after 1 hour, there was still stickiness in the dough. so i managed to dust extra flour to knead and roll and it just came out fine…hope i’m doin it the right way….
thanks a lot shilpa….:)
Shilpa: Veera, did you try 1 cup water to 1 and 3/4 cup flour? Try with that next time…If you mix too much dry flour while rolling, sometimes chapathis get hard.
Hey Shilpa
My phulkas always get burnt when I put it directly on electric coil. So I dropped making phulkas. After reading ur article I think I was doing it all wrong. May be I should have used a stand. Does it works?
Shilpa: I am sorry Anju, I have not used stand any time. I directly fry it on coil on a medium or low flame. One needs to be really careful while doing this.
Hi Shilpa,
i did used exactly 1 cup of warm water to 1 and 3/4 cup flour. added a pinch of salt and tsp of ghee. did twice but the dough is still sticky….any advice ? thanks.
Shilpa: I have no idea what went wrong Veera. I again tried the same proportions today and it works out just fine. I don’t add ghee, I add 1 -2 tea sps of oil after mixing. It kind of coats the dough.
Hey Shilpa
Few more doubt Shilpa, which flour did u use for making phulkas? The flour should be finner or thicker when u feel it?
Shilpa: If you need the texture of chapathi to be very soft, use the finer one. I use Pillsbury chakky atta which is very fine. It never fails to give good results. I have heard whole wheat atta is best for health, but the texture of chapathi/phulkas does not come out as good as the one with fine atta.
Hi Shilpa,
I can’t believe this. My rotis turn out very yummy and I have proof to offer. My baby (2 years old next month, who always resisted rotis) eats a couple every night. She eats it with marmalade though. She even likes it with methi and masala.
Thanks so much to you and this wonderful website.
Lots n’ LOTS of love,
SV.
Thank you so much Shilpa. I used to use Golden Temple(durum) flour, let me change to Pillsbury n give a try. Will let you know how it turned out. Hope I will not burn phulkas this time.
Hi,
I use an electric coil burner not a flame burner and since mine is an apartment, I don’t have a choice. My mom and I both use stands for phulkas. It gets very hot in the kitchen when I do this but it’s only for a short while. So I do it on med-high setting of electric coil and with a stand which I found someplace. I tried the same on cookie cooling racks by raising it a bit, but my efforts flopped big time back then.
SV.
Hi,
Thanks for posting this … I am a terrible and now I am able to make better chappathi.
I have to pack them for lunch … can u please post some side dishes – dhal etc.
Shilpa: Priya, There is a separate section for “side dishes” under “main menu”. Click that and you will find many dishes that can go well with chapathis.
Hi Shilpa,
great effort and also a very good website!!!
My mom wil do chapathi’s exactly lik this… and it’ll be very soft also. But was not knowing how to prepare pulka.. Thanks a lot for showing with the pictures. But got one doubt, while preparing phulka, is water and wheat floor portion is same as chapathi?
Please clarify..
Shilpa: Yes Sushma, I usually make the dough same for both. Knead the phulka dough for little more time(in case you don’t get them perfect the first time)
great shilpa..
verymuch useful for beginners
lalitha
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS RECIPE. DEFINITELY I WILL TRY TOMM. TO MAKE CHAPATI IN THIS WAY, AND LET YOU PEOPLE KNOW. ACTUALLY I KNOW HOW TO MAKE CHAPATI, BUT MY CHAPATI NEVER SOFT LIKE WHAT I HAVE HAD.
Very interesting. My Mother made Tortillas, Mexican flatbreads, by hand. She would make at least 6-8 dozen and freeze them since they freeze well. Corn is used in Authentic recipes & Wheat Flour in Northern Mexico and America. I love both.
I will try my hand to make Chapathi/Phulka. Your instructions & pictures are lovely. Thank you for a good website & even better recipes. Gracias.
wow!!!! i have no words to say….step by step procedures is very helpful for beginners like me…my chapatties are always hard…after seeing this…i’m very happy that i got a method for soft n tasty ones…surely i’ll try ths…thankz for sharing..
Hi shilpa – made lovely channa masala with horrible chappatis that were so hard despite all the ghee on itlast night – felt miserable. I will try your recipe tomorrow and let u kno how it was. One query though – how do u retain the softness of dough that is refrigerated? I do make dough and keep it in the fridge for use later- but always see that it becomes like pappad! Awaiting your response.
Shilpa: Priya, you need to keep the dough in a air tight container. While using, keep it out for sometime till it comes to room temperature. Coat the dough with some oil before keeping in refrigerator. If I remember anything else, I will update here.
thanks shilpa – will try that .another query Ihad in this regard is do we necessarily have to add ghee and fold it for the chappatis to be soft?
Shilpa: No Priya, ghee is not a must. Once you know exactly how to make soft chapathis(after making chapathis few times and satisfied with result), you can leave out the ghee. But it is a easy way of making them soft and it also gives nice taste.
Hi,
I followed your steps to make Chapthi and I was able to make wonderful nice and soft Chapathi first time in my life.Nice job explaining this.
Shilpa,
I tried the Pulkha the same way u have mentioned to my surprise it turned out very well when i saw the Pulkha puff up i literally jumped in joy…..
hi shilpa – i tried it this way – and it has come out well many times. I did the same and packed it for my parents with a potato stuffing as a roll for their journety to the US. when they landed at london airport and openend it to eat – apprently it was all soggy and tasted uncooked. any reason y? do u have to make differently if it has to be packed for journeys?
Shilpa: Priya, if you stuff anything in the chapathis and roll it, the chapathis absorb moisture from the stuffing and become soggy. If you have to pack it for journeys, you have to pack chapathis only after they are cooled to room temperature(otherwise the steam from them makes chapathis soggy) and the stuffing should be packed separately.
Hey Shilpa !
Nice pictorial representation on how to prepare soft chapatis. Very useful for Bachelors like me !Gonna try it out tomorrow.
God Bless You!!!
Hi Shilpa,
Yesterday i tried Phulka with the help of your detailed steps. It came out very well. I loved having it.
Thanks a lot
hi Shilpa,
Can I know which brand flour in the US u use for making chapatis and where is it available
Shilpa: Neha, I buy Pillsbury chakki fresh atta from Indian stores. The other good brnad is Sujata. Are you in US? where?
Its really helpful.
I made chapathis today by following this, it came out very well.
Great effort!!!
Thanks a lot shilpa, it really helped ……………!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you so very much for this step by step guide! I am off to make lunch now. Wish me luck with the Pulkas!
Hey, Thanks for the detailed procedure.
I make really bad rotis.They were not very soft and thr rotis were ugly too.
I tried phulkas as per ur procedure.I was surprised tosee it blow up like a baloon.and the phulkas were really soft.Though the phulkas were not exceptionally beautiful.May b that will come with practice.Thanks again.
HI Shilpa,
I followed your tips on chapati it came out soft. As i have electric stove my phulka may be did not come well.
For the first time I got to know about this website. I like the way you explain the steps to be followed. Please give me recipe for Fruit salad with icecream and how to make tomato puree at home.
Hi Shipla,
Nice presentation!!!!!!!
Appreciate your patience & way of teaching.You have taken lots of efforts to show all steps through photogaphs.
good!!!
Hi Shilpa,
I must say, I am terrible at cooking (Just got married you know) so I came in search of making chapati’s softer, which always eludes from me even after putting oil,milk & stuff like that. I will try stepwise as suggested by you this time.
I just wonder how come you know so many recipes!!! I dare not think I could ever know those many
(
Btw, oil paintings are superb, superb would be an understatement though!!! Where do you get time, I always find it so hard to get time for anything.
( sob… sob…
Hi
I reached to this site while searching asafoetida through google link. But the recipies are really amazing and easy to follow. I will certainly try these things to improve my cooking.
Thanks a lot for providing these valuable information. I didn’t know cooking can also be broken down to technical steps. Now I think guys like me, can also cook well.
Hi Shilpa,
Amazing!!!!!!U hav alot of patience to take so many pictures and giv such a detailed explanation.
I hav a tip here:
Try adding a little whey(Water remained after removing butter from curd) while kneading the dough. U will get soft and nutritious chapathis.
your dishes have the aroma of home which is what makes them soo different from outdoor foods . keep up the good work .
that is so good and clear.