There’s so much more to breads in Indian cuisine, than just the well-known flatbreads. For instance, take this Pav, which is also popular under the sobriquet Ladi Pav and is a specialty from the ‘city of dreams,’ Mumbai in Maharashtra. While there’s more to read about this Mumbai style bun in the post, I’m also sharing a step-by-step Pav Recipe for you to easily follow and make this soft, fluffy and light bread at home. The ingredients are not much but the procedure is quite long. So, make sure to follow the recipe well to get the best result.
About Pav Recipe
Pav is basically a small loaf of bread, introduced by the Portuguese in India. Thus, also referred to as ‘pao,’ going by the Portuguese food traditions.
In Hindi, the word Pav refers to ‘quarter or ¼ᵗʰ .’ Sometimes you get the Ladi Pav in a set of 4. It is also said that since the bakers kneaded the dough with their feet at that time, the name is Pav which means ‘feet’ in Hindi.
Commercially, Pav is always made with maida or all-purpose flour. However, at home, we can make these small bread rolls with whole wheat flour (atta) or other flours. I also make a Pav Recipe with 100% whole wheat flour.
You could opt to make Pav with equal portions of both all-purpose flour and whole wheat flour. Pav made this way using an equal mix of both the flours also yields a soft and light texture.
The recipe of Mumbai Ladi Pav in this post is made with 100% all-purpose flour (maida). I make these light bread rolls once in a while or on demand, when the regular Whole Wheat Bread or chapatis get monotonous for the family.
I have developed this Pav Recipe over a period of time to get the best result. The recipe method makes use of the sponge or ‘poolish’ method for leavening, resulting in super soft and spongy Pav.
I have added instant yeast in the recipe. However, fresh yeast or dry active yeast can also be used. To get the aroma and taste like that of the Ladi Pav made in the bakeries, it is advisable to use fresh yeast. The proportions of all 3 are mentioned in the recipe card below.
Usually, I make these Mumbai style buns or dinner rolls to be served with Pav Bhaji, Misal Pav, Masala Pav, Vada Pav, samosa pav or pav sandwich. I never buy Pav from outside as this recipe really yields in excellent homemade bread rolls.
How to make Pav
Make Dough
1. In a bowl take, 1 cup all-purpose flour, 1 teaspoon instant yeast (rapid rise yeast) and 2 teaspoons sugar.
Make sure the water is lukewarm. If not then all your efforts will go waste. The water should not be hot.
Note: If using active dry yeast or fresh yeast, then ensure the water is neither hot nor cool. Hot water will destroy the yeast and less warm water or cool water won’t help in activating the yeast.
2. Add 1 cup lukewarm water.
3. Stir or whisk to make a smooth and thick batter without any lumps.
4. Cover and keep the bowl for 30 to 40 minutes or till you see a bubbly and frothy mixture. The batter would also have risen.
The picture below shows the consistency. This is the sponge starter.
5. Add 2 tablespoons oil, 1 teaspoon salt and 1 cup all-purpose flour.
6. Mix with a spoon or spatula.
7. Add 1.25 cups of all-purpose flour.
8. Mix and then begin to knead for about 10 to 12 minutes. If the dough appears sticky, then you can add about ¼ to ½ cup flour.
The proportion of water to be added depends on the quality of the flour. Overall, I added 3.25 cups flour and 1 cup water.
You can also knead the dough using a stand-mixer bowl attached to a dough hook.
9. Knead to a smooth, pliable, soft and elastic dough. The dough on stretching should not break or tear.
Leaven Dough
10. Spread oil or butter all over the dough. Cover the bowl with a kitchen cotton napkin or a lid and keep the bread to leaven for 20 to 25 minutes.
The leavening time depends on the type of yeast used and the temperature conditions.
- For instant yeast, 20 to 25 minutes of the first rise is enough.
- For dry active yeast or fresh yeast, you will have to keep for about 45 minutes to 1 hour or more.
11. The risen and doubled dough for Pav.
12. Gently punch and deflate the dough and form a log.
13. Slice the log into equal portions.
14. Take each portion and roll between your palms to get a smooth round roll.
Bake Pav
15. Make rolls this way and place them in a greased baking tray keeping 1 inch space between each. Cover and keep for 25 to 30 minutes for the second rise. The small buns would increase in size.
16. Then, brush the rolls with some milk. This gives a golden color to the Ladi Pav.
17. Place the baking tray in a preheated oven at 200° C/ 390° F for 25 to 30 minutes or till the tops turn golden and the rolls sound hollow on tapping.
Before baking, remember to preheat oven at for 200° C/ 390° F 15 minutes.
18. Remove the baked rolls from the tray (with a spatula) and place on a wired rack or wired tray, so that they don’t become softened and moist from the bottom due to heat condensation.
Brush melted butter or spread softened butter on top of the Pav for a glaze. This is an optional step.
19. Serve Pav warm or at room temperature with any curry like Usal, a vegetable dish or just as plain Maska Pav (buttered rolls) with Masala Chai or Cutting Chai.
You can also use them to make Mumbai street food snacks like pav bhaji, misal pav, vada pav or Kacchi Dabeli.
Leftover Pav keeps well for about a week in the fridge and a few weeks in the freezer.
Expert Tips
- If you can source, then try making pav with unbleached all-purpose flour. You can also make these fluffy dinner rolls with bread flour.
- The quantity of water to be added depends on the quality of flour. If the dough become sticky, then add some flour and if the dough looks dry, then add some water.
- Instead of kneading with hands, you can also knead the dough in a food processor or in an electric mixer with a dough hook.
- If the top surface of the buns browns quickly, then place aluminium foil or parchment paper on the top. This will avoid further browning.
- The leavening time depends on the type of yeast used and the temperature conditions. For instant and fresh yeast, keep for 20 to 25 minutes for the first rise. For dry active yeast, you will have to keep for about 45 minutes to 1 hour or more.
- Brushing the pav bread rolls with some milk gives a nice golden color to them on baking. You can brush the baked buns with melted butter too for a glaze.
- Once the Ladi Pav bread is baked, remove them from the tray and place on a wired rack so that they don’t soften or moisten from the bottom due to heat condensation.
More Bread Recipes To Try!
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Pav Recipe | Ladi Pav | Pav Bread
Ingredients
- 3.25 to 3.5 cups all-purpose flour (maida) – I added 3.25 cups flour
- 2 tablespoons oil or softened butter, use any neutral flavored oil
- 1 teaspoon instant yeast or 1.5 teaspoon dry active yeast or 1 tablespoon fresh yeast
- 2 teaspoons sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt or add as required
- 1 cup water – lukewarm, do add water if needed later
- 1 to 2 tablespoons milk – for brushing, optional
- 1 to 2 tablespoons butter – melted, for brushing on pav bread
Instructions
Making dough
- In a bowl take 1 cup of all-purpose flour, instant yeast and sugar.
- Add 1 cup lukewarm water. Stir or whisk to make a smooth thick batter without any lumps.
- Cover and keep the bowl for 30 to 40 minutes till you see a bubbly and frothy layer on the top. The batter would also have risen.
- Add oil, salt and 1 cup flour. Mix with a spoon or spatula.
- Next add 1.25 cup flour. Mix again and then begin to knead for about 10 to 12 minutes.
- If the dough appears sticky then you can about ¼ cup flour more or as needed. The proportion of water to be added, depends on the quality of the flour. I added 3.25 cups flour for 1 cup of lukewarm water.
- Knead very well to a smooth, soft, supple and elastic dough.
- Place dough in a bowl. Spread oil or softened butter all over the dough.
Leavening pav dough
- Cover the bowl with a lid or a kitchen cotton napkin and keep the bread to leaven for 20 to 25 minutes.
- Once the pav dough has risen and doubled, then gently punch and deflate the dough and form a neat log.
- Cut the log into equal sizes. Take each portion and roll between your palms to get a smooth round roll.
- Make rolls this way and place them in a greased tray keeping 1 inch space between all of them.
- Cover and allow the second rise for 25 to 30 minutes. The small buns would increase in size.
Baking ladi pav
- Just before 15 minutes you bake the pav, preheat the oven at 200° C/ 390° F.For a regular oven, heat both the top and bottom elements. For a microwave oven with convection mode, preheat for 15 minutes at 180° C/356° F.
- Then brush the pav buns with some milk. This gives a golden color to laadi pav.
- Place the baking tray in the center rack in a preheated oven at 200° C/ 390° F for 25 to 30 mins or till the tops turn golden and the pavs sound hollow on tapping. For baking in the microwave oven at convection mode, bake at 180° C/356° F.
- Remove them from the tray (with a spatula) and place on a wired rack or wired tray, so that they don't become softened and moist from the bottom due to heat condensation.
- Brush melted butter or spread softened butter on top of the pavs. This is an optional step.
- Serve the Pav warm or at room temperature with any curry, vegetable dish or just as plain bun maska pav (buttered rolls) served with masala chai.
- Pav can be stored in the refrigerator for about a week. Keep them in air-tight a container or a bread box.
Notes
- If the dough become sticky then add some flour and if the dough looks dry, then add some water.
- If the top surface of the bread browns quickly than place aluminum foil or parchement paper on the top. This will avoid further browning.
- Instead of kneading with hands, you can also knead the dough in a food processor or in an stand mixer with a dough hook.
- The leavening time depends on the type of yeast used. For instant and fresh yeast, 20 to 25 minutes of the first rise is enough. For dry active yeast, you will have to keep for about 45 minutes to 1 hour or more.
- If possible use unbleached all-purpose flour. You can also make pav with bread flour.
- Pav recipe can be easily halved, doubled or tripled.
Nutrition Info (Approximate Values)
This Pav Recipe from the archives first published in October 2014 has been updated and republished on January 2023.
hi dassana! there seems a typo error.salt isn’t mentioned in” how to make recipe”
thanks meveera. i will update it.
Thank you so much for this recipe. Just tried it and it came out very well. Except since I was following the instructions before the pictorial step-by-step, I missed out the salt. My bad! :p
Welcome Sowmya. Glad to know that you liked the pav recipe.
How make this in microwave?
sneha, this recipe won’t work in the microwave.
Thank u dear ????????
welcome snehal.
you are plain genius Dassana! I made these pavs and they turned out so amazing. It was unbelievable that home made pavs could turn out so good and that too in my first try :). Thank you sooo much. Only the whole process took very long. I hadn’t seen that we have to add warm water. I guess that was the reason and may be the cold weather too. Thanks again Dassana.
thanks a lot ritu. homemade pav are too good.i bake them when i have to make any dish like pav bhaji or vada pav or misal pav. during winters, leavening does take time. an option is to keep the dough covered with a lid in sunlight. i do that at times. for instant yeast, warm water is not essential. but if using dry active yeast or fresh yeast, then warm water is mandatory or else the yeast does not activate.
Hi Dassana,
Would like to know if the temperature of water has to be lukewarm throughout ? Meaning does it have to be lukewarm even when we think that the dough is dry and need to add some more water at that point ?
one for yeast proofing the water has to be lukewarm. when adding water later if the dough is dry, then the water can be at room temperature. but should not be cold.
Thank you so much. Will try the recipe soon.Shall let you know how it turned out.
welcome ritu.
If I need to bake it in batches, then how should I store the dough for the second batch when the first one is baking?
keep in the fridge. keep the pan covered with lid or foil or a cotton napkin.
Hi,
I will be trying the recipe soon.. can I double the recipe.. will the outcome be same?
Thanks,
Priya
you can double the recipe. in case the dough looks dry, then you can always add more water. if you knead well and the yeast gets proofed well, the the result is always good.
Hi,
I tried this recipe for the second time yesterday. The first time, the yeast did not cooperate and resulted in a hard ball. But with fresh packet of instant yeast, the pav was fabulous, nice and soft with the exact shade as in the picture. Only difference was that since I did not make all the balls of equal size, some were a little bit bigger than others, but all baked perfectly. Made pav bhaji and now there are no more pavs left 🙂 Thank you.
ranjani, thanks for the feedback. most of the times the texture of the bread largely depends on how well the yeast has proofed. with instant yeast, its easier and better as there are less chances of things going wrong. glad that recipe came out good for you.
Hi mam,
Today i have tried the bombay pav recipe. Till step 15 everything came as u mentioned but after baking it was hard on top. Mine is microwave and i used the convection mode at 200 degree for 15 minutes. Where the mistake would be?
Subhashini, looks like the pav has got baked too much. Oven timing varies from oven to oven. So it helps to keep a check. next time bake for little less time.
Hi!
I tried ur recipe of pav today. And it was so soft and spongy. Simply perfect. My family just loved it. Thanks a lot dear!
welcome naz 🙂 thanks for positive views.
Hi ..!
I tried pav today.. unfortunately it did not come out properly. I baked it for 30 mins may be because of dat outr ws hard.. even after 30mins it did not even turn a bit brown.. bakef at
outside was hard or the inner texture was hard. let me know.
I prepared ladi pav with u r receipee followed all the steps but my outer layer crust became hard what would be the reason I baked pav 20 minutes on lower Heat and 5 minutes both side what went wrong
the outer crust got hard due to over baking or too much heat coming from the top heating element in the oven. also oven temperatures vary with the size, model and capacity. so the time can be more or less.
Tried your Bombay Pav recipe last night, AMAZING!! Definitely a keeper this recipe. Thank you, thank you, Thank you.
thanks a lot michelle for this positive review 🙂
Hi dear,this is first time that i failed one recipe of ur blog 🙁 it didn’t come so well,to make top brown i bake for some extra time but then the outer layer was very hard…plz advice. Taste was good as like market but d overall appearance i guess i did many things wrong.
while baking and especially for the first time or during the beginning, things can go wrong. looks like the top crust got baked too much. just a even golden color is fine on the top. if the bread or rolls are kept for too long in the oven, the top will become hard. so next time you can bake till you see the top becoming golden.