Curry Recipes Online
British Indian Restaurant Recipe Requests => British Indian Restaurant Recipe Requests => Topic started by: jimhatton on January 06, 2008, 08:02 PM
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Hi there, has anyone got a recipe for chicken or lamb Tawa? My local does these and they taste amazing, sweet caramelised onions, peppers and tasty meat. I know it sounds simple but the taste is sooooo good. I am sure there must be more to it.
Thanks,
Jim
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This sounds like a local tandoori style dish but it's too generic for a recipe. Perhaps you can elaborate more on the look, taste, smell of the meat? The veg is pretty easy to replicate I think.
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Never heard of it in a BIR I'm afraid. Has anyone?
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There appears to be plenty of UK Indian restaurants including TAWA dishes on their menu (search for CHICKEN TAWA). I haven't personally ever tried a TAWA and certainly have no idea what's in it but it certainly exists.
Regards
SnS ;D
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The only tawa or tava that I know of is the flat pan that chapatis are cooked on and I doubt that they would try to cook a curry on/in it!
I think this is one of those 'we've invented a curry so what can we call it' moments and they must have run out of good ideas.
I have seen it on menus but have never tried it so can't help with a recipe.
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The only tawa or tava that I know of is the flat pan that chapatis are cooked on and I doubt that they would try to cook a curry on/in it!
I think this is one of those 'we've invented a curry so what can we call it' moments and they must have run out of good ideas.
Well, not that it's the best authority in the world, but Wikipedia says that tavas are also used for a class of foods known as tava-fry or tava masala. Maybe it's dryer like an East Asian stir-fry with less curry base. I didn't come up with anything specific about it beyond the mention in wikipedia.
Nobody seemed to know anything about it when I mentioned it on Uncle Buck's naan thread either.
Maybe that's how they make this dish.
Here's the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tava (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tava)
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This one was bothering me so I finally managed to find out what this Tawa is, although I still can't help with a recipe!
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A local round my way sells a Chicken Tawa as the Chef's Special. Very hot, with spinage, quite dry.
The dish is served on a roasting hot iron sizzle platter, which is where I can only assume they have injected the "Tawa" name onto it.
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This one was bothering me so I finally managed to find out what this Tawa is, although I still can't help with a recipe!
Hi SS
This Tawa is what I know as a Tava
It's used to cook chapattis on
I've bought one from an Asian shop
(this doesn't help with the recipe either)
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Hi haldi, you're right there is a tava but, this is a different thing. The tawa is specifically made for cooking curries on, it's bigger and thicker than the tava we use for making chappatis on, if you look carefully at the picture I posted you can see the thickness is greater. Tavas are usually only a few millimetres thick and almost flat and that's what was bugging me because I couldn't envisage how you would cook a curry on one.
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I have gave up with recipe requests. I have learned too well now that recipe names in a restaurant means absolutely nothing. Most just name things as they want.
There was a quote once about chicken tikka masalas, and that from hundreds tested up and down the country the common factor in them was chicken.
I have gave up trying to recreate individual dishes by name, but more rather try to recreate a dish, by taste, smell and visible ingredients.
I have long gave up experimenting with bases, as I dont think the secret is in the base. As long as the base has the right amount of oil, right consistancy and is cooked long enough it will work fine.
I more enjoy experimenting with main dishes.
Fry some garlic and ginger. Throw in some pine nuts and onion, put in spices, throw in a little beetroot, add a little red wine, add chicken, add some base sauce.
8)
My home gas cooker is more powerful than any I have owned in the past and with it being a new house the gas supply seems brilliant compared to my last place which was very weak and my currys are substantially different than in my old house using the same methods.
Going off topic again now though lol.