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..
Try this m sure it will be very helpful for those who are new and want to speed up things but retain the perfection.
Make a soft dough.use a little ghee to grease it so that it dosent stick (optional). WHAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT IN MAKING A SOFT CHAPATI IS ROASTING. Kindly follow following steps:
1)Heat your tawa/girrdle well before starting to roast chapatis on high flame.
2)Reduce the flame to sim and place your chappatis. Turn it over in 15 seconds or less before it bears any brownish spots. Turn over
3)repeat it with this side.
4) Now remove from girrdle and roast on the flame. As it startes to bubble press it little with chippiya so as to bubble the whole chappati.
5)Remove from flame and apply ghee nicely especially on the sides (they are very important to keep it soft for long hours)
6)Ghee is absorbed by the fhulkas when kept them for long time (2-3hrs) before eating. so if u have to pack in tiffin or eat late apply ghee/melted butter generously.
7) If in case u want to reheat them put the Fhulkas directly on the flame for abt 2 seconds each side and remove serve immideately.
Wish u a very Happy and Soft cooking..It comes best for me.. Wish the same for you…
Hey Shilpa,
Thanks a ton People like me needed a step by step procedure in making chapaty.Myine used to come like stones.Thanks again.
Very useful. Thanks a lot.
Lovely shilpa…
Its nice U put your every effort lively for beginners as well as for those who wants to improve themselves.
Inspite of being a Male I will try this to make my every phulka soft enough.
Thaks a lot…
balbhadra patel
Just fantastic! I find it very useful,thanks.
Hi Shilpa,
Just 2day i gotta know abt ur site. chappathais n phulkas look gr8.Its a very common bread that evrybdy knows, but fails to achieve perfection. i appreciate ur step by step instructions wth beautiful pictures. Lemme give it a go n get back 2 u wth feedbacks
hi shilpa
Just 2day i gotta know abt ur site. chappathais n phulkas come great. I am a student in US 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. Could you tell me how to make longlasting chaptis.
Is there special way to make the dough, roll it and keep in the freezer , to be fried/cooked whenever I want.
Shilpa: Ridhi, I make parathas frequently and freeze them. After roasting the parathas(do not apply any ghee/oil), cool them completely, separate two parathas with a layer of wax paper and then store the entire pack in zip loc. Make in small batches so that you need not thaw them and freeze remaining again and again. Try the same with chapathis. I am sure it works well.
Thank you Shilpa. I am inspired by all the posts here. I am going to try soon.
We go to tiffin centre just to have chapathi / puri bcaz I couldn’t make any softer.
Hi Shilpa,
My mother used to knead chapati flour in the vessel in which we used to heat milk and use buttermilk water [ takaa uddak] to knead the flour and chapatis and fulkas really turn out soft.
Thank you shilpa and i am going to try it immediately
Good One
Hi,
I had seen ur recipe its superb…
but I have some other problem..
I m in US..I love Chole Puri..but dnt knw y I cant make soft puris anyhow..even if puri puffs fully thaey are not soft at all and next day they r more crispy…
I used to make dough with 1 cup aata 3/4 th cup water 1/2 tsp oil,little salt…then I used to roll very thin puris they puffs properly but they r not soft at all..
so plz help to solve my problem…
thanks…
Shilpa: Please refer Puris post.
hey,
this is an amasing site…keep up the good work…the recipes are fantastic… and they turn out very delicious…thankyou so much.
Hi shilpa, those are good tips you have for making soft chapathi, i too have been on this mission for quiet sometime now:)
Dear Shipa,
I was struggling to make Chapathi’s since some time now and I must tell you that you are just wonderful..Your Tips were just awesome and just added you to my favorites..
Thanks a million.
Subhaa
Thanks a lot, It helped me a lot to make soft chapathis.. I appreciate your work , Thank you once again
Hi
Your chapathi method is certainly very useful. Thanks for providing us with great tips.
But, your emphasis on ghee is something many people may not approve of. No offense meant, but ghee in a chapathi is a recipe for heart troubles.
Congrats on a great article. I am going to use oil in my chapathi and try your method.
Shilpa: Yes ilango. Oil works out great too.
thank you i was looking for the recepie for lllllllllong time and i finally found it thank’s
Hey Shilpa… thanks a lot for the tips ..I will try that folding funds of urs tomorrow and see how it turns ..Apreciate ur patience for explaining each and every step with pic ..
Hi Shipla, I read your recipe on how to make soft phulkas. But I have a question- can I refrigerate the dough made with oil/milk and make rotis next morning for our tiffins?
Currently that is my practise but the phulkas are still fat and hard, so i have to hold it in my palm and crush it to make it a bit crispy. It’s a make do thing and i so want to feed my husband soft thin phulkas
Any more tips pls write to me!
Thanks-
Bhavna
Shilpa: Bhavna, after making the dough, store it in an air tight container or ziploc bag to avoid the dough getting hard. While using, let it come to room temperature, kneed well and use it.
wonderful illustration. chapathis are my favourite and my aunt use to make sof n tasty chapatis. every time she visits our home i insist her to make chapati and brinjal curry for me. she cooks brinjals very tasty. infact i tried many times here in riyadh and my friends played frisbees with my hard chapathees. thanks a lot for the post
I always think that making roti is a very difficult work And also a donkey work.
I always tried new dishes but when time comes for roti I depress a lot.
One day my husband shouted at me,” bakiki dishes nahi khani hai pahale roti banana sikh le”
At that time I really feel insulting
But now I can make very nice and soft roties.
hi there,
thank you very much for taking time to give us all a detailed (with phots!) way of making chapathis and phulkas.your mentality to help is great.thank u again.
Hi Shilpa,
Great explanation & pics. I am a novice at this and I must say the phulkas puffed each time whereas they have never done that for me before. I tired this recipe exactly as u stated with 1+3/4 cup flour and 1 cup water and the water seemed like it was too much. I added nearly another cup of flour. Also the dough became so soft that it was difficult to roll out and also tore at times. I had to add more flour and knead it again. What went wrong ? How do u guys find rolling it out?
-Mamta
good info to make soft chappatis for beginners
Shilpa,
Thanks for the detailed description, Im inspired to try it out, incidently my mom makes phulkas exactly the way it is shown here, like they say its easier to recall then remember.
Only one gripe, the word ‘frying’ implies that you’re shallow frying with pouring oil on the tava as the chapati cooks, should have used the word ‘roasting’ as that is what we all really do, not fry. roast chapatis !
hey shilpa,
I love ur blog..i keep visiting very often..great work..but i have one question..i tried doing chapati and phulkas in the same way , they turned very brittle..(both the types)..can u pls let me know what is going wrong?
that is such a nice exlanation, illustration for a simple dish. Let me share my learning experience…the art of making good phulkas, chapathees lies in rolling them well without lumps/folds & making them just right -not too thin or thick. Thin rolls make dry hard phulkas while. Also use Maida whle rolling out the dough as maida is finer & would not peirce the dough while rolling.
Hi Shilpaji…
Thx for ur detailed description on chapathi and pulkas..along with the pictures…Prior to this i used to get them hard…I tried the simple tips given by u to make chapathis and they turned out to be very soft…thats really so nice of u…i liked the way u presented them ..which made my task very simple…This time i am gonna try pulkas and i am sure that i can make them perfectly with ur directions…Looking forward to see many more recipes in ur site…Once again thank u very much…
hi Shilpa,
what is that traditional kadai….what type of metal….is it available in B’lore or T.nadu?? my Mom even now uses a tawa/kadai..black….not iron…breakable…dosa..chappathi…comes out perfectly….all roasts r good in that kadai…her friend got from somewhere….Mom never uses nonstick utensils…..do u refer that as traditonal ones….pl tell me…
thanks a lot for the tip that the dough needs to be soft to make soft chapaties, i tried it and it worked!!!! previous i would get frizbees but now my chapaties r sooo soft
hi Shilpa,
browsed reg my query abt traditional kadai….but there was no reply from u…..
sleela
Hi!!!
I regularly make phulkas which turn out to be very soft, but by luch time they become very dry & what we call in marathi “VAATAD”!!!!!!!!! (although i wrap the fulkas in foil paper)
Pls help me out…..
Thanks,
Pradnya
Hey Shilpa,
I really want to try my hand at cooking, and what better place to start than with soft phulkas!! Thank you for an excellent website and your wonderful way of building up a story about each dish… I’m going to be ur regular visitor!!
I landed here when I was looking for Crab curry (I don’t do any cooking myself – I was looking for the recipe for my mom) and trust me, ur website stirred and woke up the konkana within me!!
- Shyamala
Hello maam
I really dont know how to prepare a chapati…. Have seen your way of preparing the chapati….. I am going to give it a try….. I shall feedback to you as soon as i make chapati… Thank you for helping me out….
This is something like someone teaching face to face. its wonderful. Though i prepare good chapati but still it is a good learning for me too. Thank you very much.
Hi Shilpa,
Very very nice work and the basic receipe needed for all Indians.:)
Good job and well picturised. Hats off
I must tell you this, i could never make soft chapattis and i just love eating chapatis. i surfed the net and I got your tips on making soft chapatis, Thanks a million. i am now looking up your puran poli receipe
Hi!
I use chilled milk to make dough and leave the dough overnite to make very soft Phulkas at morning .
Hi Shilpa……. this is wat i have been looking for ever since i started cooking (hardly been 2 months now..:))….making chapathis was a big challenge for me and after 2 disastrous experience i gave up…..n since then I cud not coax myself in giving one more try… now tht i have read ur article am dying to try it out….thanks a lot for ur useful tips
Hi shilpa,
i have tasted chappatis made of rice flour(from coorg), jowar (Kolhapur), maize (Punjab) and ragi ( latur). Can u share the recipee of the types of chappati’s?
Shilpa: Please use the search box above for “rotti”. I have to post ragi rotti, others are on the site.
Hey Shilpa,
thank you for the recipe, but I do not have any gas stoves, I only electric coils. How to do pulkas on electic coils?
Thanks,
Sneha
Shilpa: I do the same on electric stove too.
Hi,
Thank you so much, as yet I have only read the names of all your favourite dishes and trust me they are my favs too. I just loved the site. Am new to the cooking world. Moved to London this Jan and then on have been cooking on my own. Luckily, since I cook for myself I can experiment.
I did try Dali-toi and must say was quite close to what mum makes
.. So overjoyed I decided to try more today, beans talasan probably.
Thank you once again.. You made my day !!
Cheers,
Payal
hiii Shilpa,
u r 2 gud reh…..my phulka’s r also coming soft and puffy…
thanx yaar…
Rgds,
Sumi
The chapathis and aloo paratha turned out lovely.this site is a must recommend for all the novices like me
[...] both sides over direct flame. Or brush both sides with Oil and cook on the tawa over high flame. For pictorial refer to Shipa’s method for Phulka and Chapathi. Coriander Rotis – Rotis flavoured with coriander and [...]
Your Chapati recepie has truly been a hit at our house. I used to give my husband chapatis which used to be like frisby’s for the last 20years. Now my husband is happy with my chapatis and there are no negative comments on our table. I used to dread making chapatis for my husband, he used to yell at me every day. It was a nightmare making chapatis in the past. Could you please send me some recepies for simple day to day vegeterian cooking.
Hi shilpa,
I want to know which brand atta one should use. i am using swad. but as u don’t get hotpot in usa( wht u get in india )to keep chappatis hot.so if you keep chappatis in clothes within hour they become like hard ( like khakara). and they don’t taste same as wht we use to have in india… suggest about atta, and how to keep it hot…
Shilpa: I have used pillsbury chakki fresh atta always. According to me, it works the best. But I have heard Annapoorna and Sujata are also good. Make sure to buy finely ground whole wheat atta.
Shilpa, how can I thank you for this post? I Just Cannot make soft chapathis. My roommate in Bangalore used to make wonderful phulkas. I used to gaze at her in awe while she expertly turned over each one on the open flame. I will follow your instructions. Thanks a lot.
thank u
my son loves chapathis. mine is not bad
after learning from u item is very good
thanks a lot