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You get yourself 40 odd years of general cooking experience and knowledge along with nigh on 30 years of trying to get the BIR smell and taste (at which I have admittedly failed), mix it liberally with an energetic and enquiring mind and voila, you have someone who can turn the curry equivalent of a pig's ear into the proverbial silk purse. No secrets!
I can make any one into a decent BIR style curry
I'm sure I'll be able to do that soon (have to arrange it with Raj), but what I wanted to do first was iron out the creases in the existing gravy recipe so that it was bulletproof and not open to mistakes being made (eg: amount of water added to "cover" the veg, etc, etc). Many don't realise that this was a prototype and much of what I wrote down was from observation, and by no means accurate (as you know, they don't measure ingredients using tspns or tbspns). To do this I've got to make another batch (as shown by the saffron) but this time measuring/recording all the ingredients and times EXACTLY.Best RegardsSnS
I must admit I thought that the madras recipe was something the Saffron chefs showed you tooThe fact it wasn't, actually encourages me
As I mentioned above, I made this yesterday and made it to the letter all with brand new fresh spices.The base was very reminiscent of a very good KD version which I've had great success with in the past but with loads more depth and sweetness. I think the amount of salt in the watered down base was perfect too and it set things up for a promising final dish with no additional salt needed. I'm sure the paprika (not smoked version) is absolutely critical as I've have good results with Jaspers Munich base to - which was tremendous.Anyway to the real test. I made 3 final chicken dishes - all bhoona type consistency.Dish #1 - exactly as posted by SnS but omitted the chilli powder but used the 0.5 tsp of coriander/cumin/turmeric as indicated.Result #1 - very very wonderful with hints/undertones of *the* taste. Verdict 90/100Dish #2 - same as posted but with 0.25 tsp chilli powder, 0.75 tsp cumin/coriander/turmeric, tsp methi & tsp fresh coriander. Result #2 - awesome taste. I may have been lucky that I hit the cooking sweet spot but this was BIR class whatever made the difference. Lovely sweet, spiced and huge depth. Verdict 97/100Dish 3. as #2 but with tsp chilli powder and 1 tsp cumin/coriander/turmeric.Result #3 - OK, good but overspiced (not in the hot way)and ultimately much like may of my previous attempts. Verdict 80/100So all in all this is a classy piece of work and I'm 100% convinced this would be an awesome base to get slight modifications on the final dish - Per CA's recent suggestion. Next I will try #2 but with 0.25 tsp garamasala.Well done SnS, mega mate.PS. Ast the base and final looked exactly like yours - nice shots btw.
I really would like someone to come up with a really good accurate (prawn) Madras recipe for use the Saffron base though (Ast is in his curry laboratory soon .. so maybe we'll just have to wait for the Prof to post his results).
It seems that after freezing this base, the oil doesn't want to separate like it used too. I know I'm cooking it the same way as before, but I've tended to end up with a tad drier curries trying to wait for the oil to separate.
60ml lamb stock
I've no idea what they're called, but they look like this
Nice one AST .. great report. I'll probably try this over the weekend (maybe with prawns though).
QuoteIt seems that after freezing this base, the oil doesn't want to separate like it used too. I know I'm cooking it the same way as before, but I've tended to end up with a tad drier curries trying to wait for the oil to separate. I have also noticed this. Perhaps this is why Raj reckoned the gravy is not as good after freezing it. I wonder what would happen if the gravy was brought back to the boil before using in the curry ?
Quote60ml lamb stockHow did you make this stock ?
QuoteI've no idea what they're called, but they look like thisThey look like green Thai Dragon chillies (about 2-3 inches long (?) and 6 times hotter than Jalepeno). Did you also use the seeds ?
What ... no sooperpics
Have you tried a small bit of either ambchoor or tamarind?
Apparently from what I've read, it's the membrane inside that has all the "power of the pepper" rather than the seeds. Still, I like the seeds...
Any preferences for what you want to see?
From all of the observed reports as well as from some of the videos, the chefs generally dip the chefs spoon into the spice container and come out with an arc that doesn't seem to go past 1/3 to 1/2 of the whole spoon. Who knows what amount this is.
QuoteHave you tried a small bit of either ambchoor or tamarind? I used tamerind concentrate when I cooked a Pathia a few weeks back but I'm sure most BIR's use lemon juice. Amchoor (green mango powder) is on my shopping list, as I gather it has both a sweet and sour taste, maybe suitable for Pathia.
QuoteFrom all of the observed reports as well as from some of the videos, the chefs generally dip the chefs spoon into the spice container and come out with an arc that doesn't seem to go past 1/3 to 1/2 of the whole spoon. Who knows what amount this is.That's why it was impossible to get the recipe measurements exact at my initial visit! :