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Marie Mitchell's Make-Ahead Roti

Marie Mitchell's Make-Ahead Roti

We’ve teamed up with chef and writer Marie Mitchell to share her go-to roti recipe — the perfect freezer win for a busy week. Pair it with our Sweet Potato & Chickpea Bites, a crisp cabbage slaw and creamy white bean sauce for a flavour-packed lunch that comes together in minutes.

A note from Marie:
Kin is a love letter, archive, and legacy of my Caribbean identity — much like roti feels like a love letter to everyone you make it for. It always starts with self-love, something I’m still learning to master. I keep roti ready in the freezer — future me is always grateful for that win! I’m busy (aren’t we all?), and cooking for a living means speedy, nourishing lunches are my jam on the days I’m already in the kitchen.

Serves

6

Ingredients
For the roti dough

450g bread flour, plus extra for dusting

½ tbsp baking powder

½ tbsp fine sea salt

½ tbsp light brown soft sugar

½ tbsp sunflower oil

300ml hand-hot water or oat milk

For pan frying

100ml sunflower oil

Method
1 Place all the dry ingredients into a large mixing bowl and stir to combine. Make a well in the centre and pour in the water or oat milk. Using your fingers, gradually incorporate the dry ingredients into the liquid to form a wet dough.
2 Turn out the dough on to a lightly floured work surface and knead it for about 10 minutes, to a soft, springy ball that you can press lightly and have it spring back. Grease the dough with oil, then place it in a clean bowl. Cover, and leave the dough to rest at room temperature for 30 minutes.
3 Divide the dough into six equal balls. One by one, hold each ball in the palm of one hand and gently pinch the outer edge of the ball with your opposite hand, bringing it into the centre. Repeat all around the ball edge. Use a thumb to press into the centre to seal all the pinches together. Once you have sealed all the balls, oil them and rest them in your mixing bowl, covered with a tea towel, for another 30 minutes (you can place them on a baking tray, if you prefer). Once they have rested, use your hands to gently flatten each ball and rotate it to form a fat disc.
4 A portion at a time, shape the roti. Using a rolling pin, roll each dough ball into a 15cm disc, repeatedly rolling and turning through 180 degrees for an even roll. Imagine the disc as a clock face. Slice the dough disc at 12 o’clock, making a vertical slit to the centre. Brush the disc generously with your oil and ghee mixture, all the way to the edge, then pick up the right-hand cut edge and, in thirds, fold over the first half of the clock face, in a clockwise direction (2 o’clock to 4 o’clock to 6 o’clock). Then, roll the dough from the folded edge around the rest of the imaginary clock face (clockwise to 12), so that you finish with a tight, layered cone. Holding the cone in one hand, point downward, use your opposite thumb to push all the layers into the centre to seal the end of the cone. Return the cone to the work surface, sealed end downward, and press in the pointed end to seal there, too. Repeat for each ball of dough.
5 Transfer the roti to the fridge and rest them for at least 4 hours, but ideally overnight, so you preserve those lovely layers. Alternatively place the cones in an airtight container (side by side, but never stacked on top of one another, which would deform their shape) and freeze them for up to 3 months. (Alternatively you can freeze them once they are rolled out, before cooking, and cook them from frozen.) Keep the remaining oil and ghee mixture for when you come to cook – you’ll need to warm it a little to loosen it again for brushing.
6 When you’re ready to cook, gently flatten the dough balls into a round and roll them out using the same motion of one direction at a time, repeatedly rotating through 180 degrees to get a circular, flat roti, about 15cm in diameter and 4–5mm thick (don’t worry if it’s not perfect – my roti rarely are). You don’t want to roll too hard or too thin as you will then lose all the lovely layers.
7 Warm a tawa or frying pan on a medium heat. When hot, brush the pan with your oil and place your first roti on or in the pan. Oil the roti a little before flipping it over, you’ll want to make sure it is nicely coloured – no more than 30 seconds to 1 minute each side should be perfect. Then, beat each roti all over with your spatula until it starts to break up a little, before setting aside to keep warm while you repeat with the remaining dough. Once all the roti are cooked, serve them straightaway.
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