What is your roti technique telling you?
Answer 5 honest questions about your roti-making and get a personalised result that tells you exactly what's holding your rotis back — and what fixes it.

Taken by 50,000+ Indian women
Free · No email needed · 100% private
How do your rotis usually turn out?
Pick the answer that best describes your most common result.
How long does making a full batch of rotis take you?
Be honest — include the rolling, correcting, and re-rolling time.
How do you feel while making rotis?
This is about your experience, not just the result.
Do you feel any of these while or after rolling rotis?
Any physical discomfort during or after a roti-making session.
What matters most to you with your rotis?
Pick the outcome that would make the biggest difference to your morning.
Analysing your roti technique…
Matching you to your perfect roti solution
- Reviewing your roti technique
- Matching the right roti maker features
- Building your personalised report
Your rotis aren't lopsided because of your hands. They're lopsided because of your tool.
The rolling pin cannot give you a circle. That's not how circles are made.

Your answers show that your primary frustration is one of the most common in Indian kitchens: rotis that come out oval, lopsided or inconsistently shaped — no matter how carefully you try.
Here's what your technique test reveals: this isn't a skill problem. A rolling pin physically cannot produce a consistent circle, because it needs the exact same pressure at the exact same angle from the exact same starting point — every roti, every time. Human hands cannot replicate that. Nobody's can. Not even your mother's.
The Swiings Wooden Roti Maker solves this at the source. Place dough in the centre, press straight down, lift. Every roti is perfectly round, consistent in size and even in thickness — from the very first press. No correction. No re-rolling. No more oval results.
15% extra off prepaid · Trusted by 50,000+ women
⚡ 20% off today — price goes back to ₹2,399 soon
You're spending 3× more time on rotis than you need to. Here's why.
Correction and re-rolling are costing you 15–20 minutes every single morning.

Your technique test shows that time is your biggest roti problem. And the hidden thief isn't the rolling itself — it's the correction loop: roll, notice the unevenness, try to fix it, over-correct, re-roll. Indian households spend an estimated 180+ extra hours a year on roti rework — more than seven full days, every year, just trying to get a circle round.
The Swiings Wooden Roti Maker eliminates the correction loop entirely. One press, perfect circle, straight to the tawa. No correction, no rework, no time lost. A session that took 45 minutes becomes 20 — a chore you dreaded becomes a task you finish before the chai is ready.
Built from durable food-grade wood with a quick-press mechanism designed for effortless, even flattening — from first press to tawa in seconds.
15% extra off prepaid · Trusted by 50,000+ women
⚡ Save ₹500 today — ₹2,399 after this offer ends
Your wrists aren't weak. They're being asked to do something they weren't built for.
Rolling roti is one of the most repetitively strenuous kitchen tasks. Your body isn't wrong to protest.

Your technique test reveals the most underreported problem in Indian kitchens: repetitive wrist and shoulder strain from daily rolling. Physiotherapists call this repetitive strain injury — and it affects an estimated 1 in 4 Indian women who make rotis daily. Most are told it's just part of cooking. It isn't.
A rolling pin concentrates all the force through two small wrist joints, pushing against resistance, repeatedly, for years. The Swiings Wooden Roti Maker replaces that with a single downward press that uses your larger muscle groups and needs minimal wrist load. Ten rotis feel like two — and the ache after the session is gone.
For women with arthritis, early wrist problems or existing shoulder pain, this isn't just a convenience — it's a way to keep making rotis without pain.
15% extra off prepaid · Trusted by 50,000+ women
⚡ 7-day returns if you don't feel the difference
The roti anxiety is real. And it has nothing to do with your cooking ability.
The stress of making round rotis for family and guests is one of the most quietly universal experiences in Indian kitchens.

Your technique test shows that your biggest roti problem isn't physical — it's emotional. The frustration of inconsistent results. The anxiety when guests are coming and every roti needs to be round. The quiet feeling that everyone else has mastered something you can't.
None of this is about your ability. It's about the tool. A rolling pin introduces variability that no amount of practice fully removes. Inconsistent results aren't a failure of technique — they're the predictable output of a tool that demands an impossible level of precision.
The Swiings Wooden Roti Maker removes the variability entirely. Every press, every roti: perfectly round, perfectly even, perfectly consistent. No more anxiety before a dinner party. No more frustration when the fourth roti looks nothing like the first. Just the quiet confidence that every roti off your tawa will look exactly as it should.
15% extra off prepaid · Trusted by 50,000+ women
⚡ 29% off today only — ₹2,399 after this offer ends