Curry Recipes Online
Curry Photos & Videos => Pictures of Your Curries => Topic started by: jockomalay on August 29, 2006, 01:24 PM
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Here are some pictures of my Balti Curry being fired off
Cheers
Jockomalay
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Bloody hell! Well impressed.
At what stage was the cooking at when you flamed it and how did you get it to flame?
YF
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Flaming Hell!! ;)
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Hi Yellow Fingers,
After you have cooked everything. If you are have having Balti style chicken breast for example, the chicken it should be just this side of pink. Heat 2tbls of oil till it's really hot, then add a couple of ladles of the complete sauce in quick succession, it will fire up as the hot oil spontaneously combusts, it should only flame for a couple of seconds as the sauce will bring down the temperature below combustion level. There will be a lot of smoke, turn down the heat immediately and sizzle for around 1-2 mins, stir around and at the end add a good two tablespoons of chopped fresh coriander leaves. As I said in my previous posts it is best to do this outside, unless of course you have an industrial sized extractor fan.
Cheers
Jockomalay
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Very well done, that has got to be tried
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Fantastic ;D
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My God...hows the ceiling? :o
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Hi Jock,
Looks like fun Jock! ;D
Do you know the input energy consumption of your burner? (in Mega Joules per hour.....MJ/h?)......there should be a sticker on the burner somewhere?
I'm just about to buy a similar burner but I'm not sure whether to go for a 32 MJ/h (three valve) burner or a 59MJ/h (4 valve) burner......
......awwww.....what the hell! I think I'll go with the 59 MJ/h one...I can always turn off one valve if I'm having too much fun! :P
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Looks good and about right for what you are trying to achieve. There has been a lot of discussion about this technique on another thread and it is just about to be transferred to Hints & Tips etc. Also Darth posted links to a site that sells these burners. The point about flaming (correct name is flash frying, which is not flambe) is that it is the gas/stem/oil mixture above the dish that you ignite not the actual oil or ingredients in the pan. All oils change their chemical structure when ignited and they become carcinogenic! Look what happens in a chip pan fire!
Happy Safe Cooking
CP
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Hi there,
Yep it's not the ingredients that are burning but the mixture of oil vapour & steam above the pan, you don't heat the oil so much that it starts to burn, i.e. chip pan scenario. Now that stinks..
Re carcinogenic, so are chips & crisps & most importantly chicken tikka!!. In the words of Private Fraser "We're aw doomed". Of course, we could start eating raw ostrich eggs fed on alfalfa. see...
http://www.mercola.com/2002/jul/3/fast_food.htm
Re Cory Ander and the question of the burner, afraid I don't know the answer to that I bought mine for about 3 quid in a local supermarket. I will post a picture of it if you like.
Re Curry Chris...Ceilings fine cos I do it outside.
Cheers
Jockomalay
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Spot on JOck! Re carcinogenic: absolutely and we all have free will. Never mind the ceiling what about the ozone layer ;D ;D ;D ::) ;)
CP
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jockomalay,
just found this post for the 1st time via your link.
puts my burner well on the small side being ~8kw.
very best wishes,