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Messages - pforkes

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1
Which SPECIFIC recipes are you interested in?  if,say, you could have five recipes, which ones would they be?  Let's see if we can narrow it down a bit for you.

2
House Specialities / Chicken 65
« on: March 01, 2011, 05:40 PM »
Chicken 65

This is an Indian dish that does not seem to have made it to the shores of Blighty.

I never came across Chicken 65 when I was in England, instead I came across it while in Silicon Valley where some of the Indian restaurants there would serve it in lunch buffets.  The name comes from the fact that was the 65th items on a very large menu on an Indian military base and it was easier to order by number, because of the large size of the menu.

Last summer a couple of Indian friends came to visit and they cooked this for me. 

Just because you may not have heard of this does not mean that you should not try it.  It's really quite simple to do and the red food coloring really makes it look appetizing.  This is am authentic Indian favorite and now it is one of my favorites.


Chicken 65
Ingredients
2 lbs chicken-dark meat(boneless thigh meat)
1/2 tsp MSG
2 tsp ginger/garlic paste
2 tsp corn flour
1 egg 
? bunch coriander leaves-chopped
? tsp each tsp cumin seeds, ground pepper, cumin powder chili powder, salt
1 tsp garlic-chopped
4-5  curry leaves-chopped
1/2 tsp ginger-chopped
Ginger garlic paste
Chili garlic paste (Vietnamese brand "tuong ot toi" http://www.thekitchenstore.com/tuottoivichg.html)
4-5 green chili
Oil
2-3 drops red colouring
Limejuice
Water

Steps
Begin by heating the oil, for frying.
Place the chicken in a bowl Add salt, MSG, ginger garlic paste, ground pepper and corn flour.  Mix it by hand.  Add egg and mix by hand.
Add to the hot oil (do not add too much chicken at once or all the chicken pieces will stick together.  Once browned remove the chicken from the oil and set aside.

Add oil to a hot pad.
One ingredient at a time add ? tsp cumin seeds.
When the cumin seeds splatter add chopped ginger.
Next add 1 tsp chopped garlic and stir for 30-seconds.
Add chopped chilies, chopped curry leaves and stir for 30-seconds.
If you wish, add ginger garlic paste and stir.
Add ground pepper, ? tsp cumin powder, ? tsp chili powder, salt, chili-garlic paste and stir.
Add MSG and  (if you wish) red coloring.
Add a little water and stir before adding the chicken.
Stir everything to coat the chicken in the sauces.
Sprinkle with limejuice before serving.

3
Bhuna / Re: Takeaway Bhuna Recipe
« on: October 13, 2010, 04:16 PM »
I tried the recipe at the beginning of this thread last night, and I have to say it was disappointing.  It was bland.

I'm going to have to think more about what it was missing, but first and foremost it was too tomatoey.



Hi, new to the site and loving it all. This is a recipe  I obtained 25 years ago from my local takeaway and it never fails. The methods and one particular ingredient aren't what I have seen elsewhere so please give it a try. My missus loves this and I swear I can cook it with my eyes closed!

Bhuna

Ingredients:

A quarter pint of oil
Cooked ingredient of choice, chicken or whatever or raw prawns
1 teaspoon each of Cumin, Coriander, Cayenne, Turmeric, Garam Masala. Mixed into a stiff paste with a little water
1 heaped tablespoon tomato puree
5 cloves garlic chopped and mashed into a paste
1 chopped green pepper
1 large onion, halved top to bottom then sliced into thin segments
2 chopped fresh tomatoes
1 tin chopped tomatoes
1 teaspoon salt
1 handful of methi leaves
1  teaspoon Rose Water
Fresh coriander to garnish

Instructions:

In a Wok or Karai heat oil over medium heat  then fry tomato puree and garlic puree for 2-3 mins till oil colours but take care not to brown garlic. Add onions and chopped green pepper and fry till softened, stirring all the time.

Add spice paste and fry 2 mins then add fresh tomatoes and fry 2 more mins.

Add chopped tinned tomatoes and 1 teaspoon salt and fry 3-4 mins, stirring all the time.

Add cooked meat or prawns and fry one minute.

Place methi leaves in one palm and rub together with other to bruise, then add to dish.

Add 1  teaspoon Rose Water and continue to fry till sauce thickens .

Finally add chopped fresh coriander leaves and serve.

Hope you enjoy this, the sauce is garlicky and to die for!

5
I transcribed much of what Alton Brown said, on this episode. 

I don't know if his program (Good eats http://www.foodnetwork.com/good-eats/index.html) is seen anywhere other than on the Food Channel, here in the US. It's the only food program I watch religiously, as it's pretty much the only one that I learn anything from (since he focusses on the science behind food preparation).

In this episode he explains how (if you do not have a tandoor) you can build your own, using a large terra cota plant pot, with the bottom cut off, and how to get it up to over 800 degrees fahrenheit, using  a barbecue and 5 pounds of charcoal.

Here's the transcript:


"Garam Masala
Before grinding spices that are destined for a masala you always want to toast them first. Heat activates the essential oils inside spices rendering them more volatiles, and therefore more effective.

Even heat is the key, so I always reach for an 8-inch cast iron skillet. This goes over medium-high heat. Now the garam masala mixture could not be simpler.
To the medium high cast iron skillet, add:

 
2 tbsp cardamom seeds
2 tbsp coriander seeds
2 tbsp black pepper corns (preferably tellicherry)
1 tbsp cumin
1 tbsp brown mustard seeds
20 cloves
1 stick cinnamon (about 2? inches, broken in half)
1 arbol chili, crumbled (end and seeds removed)


Cook for 3-4 minutes (or until the entire kitchen smells like an Indian restaurant) and then cool for 5 minutes.
Meanwhile, grate 1 tsp fresh nutmeg
When the spices are cool, move them into your coffee grinder. Processes for about a minute or until you have a fine powder.  Then, add the nutmeg. Process again, just to combine.

Prepare the lamb tikka marinade
Take a 1-gallon Ziploc bag, inside a container that can hold it
Add 1 tbsp garam masala, ? toasted and ground cumin seed, ? toasted & ground cumin seed, 1 tsp kosher salt and ? tsp fresh ground black pepper.  Shake to combine.
Add 1 1/2 lbs lamb leg, cubed (from the sirloin end).
Seal the back and given it a shake.
Open the bag and add 1 cup plain, whole milk yogurt (do not use low fat).
Seal, and mix together.
Squeeze out the air and refrigerate for a minim of 30-minutes to a couple of hours.

Prepare the tandoor
It?s important to remember that yogurt is the number one dairy food of India. It is particularly prevalent in the cuisines of the southern states, where is appears in pretty much every meal. Often in the form of a thick paste which serves as a marinade, then an insulator during cooking and finally as part of the sauce, which is exactly what we are up to here today. Although the final flavor of this tikka will in deed come from this spa treatment, as it is, we must not discount the impact of the cooking device most associated with tikkas in their homeland, namely?

Tandoor basically means ?oven.? And ?tandoori? refers to foods that are cooked in a tandoor. Although its exact cultural origins are a little shaky, this vertical earthen oven rose to prominence in modern day Punjab, possibly by way of the Middle East and northern Africa, where similar ovens were used to bake bread for the workers toiling on the pyramids.
The device itself is cunningly simple. Air enters the bottom of the oven and feeds the open charcoal fire, which in turn loads the ceramic material with an excess of 800?F worth of heat. The tapered top creates what engineers refer to as a venturi focusing the convective heat. In essence the tandoor is great big clay jet engine for cooking food.
Flat breads are typically just slapped onto the sides of the interior walls, to bake.  But meats go on large skewers and just about anything can go into a tandoor. Now, the high heat (especially when it mingles with the yogurt based marinade creates a very, very distinct flavor that is regrettably difficult to replicate in the home environment.

'Tandoor' comes from the Persian word tannur, which derives from the Babylonian word tinuru,
 based on the Semitic word nar, meaning fire.


Well, since we don?t have a tandoor we?ll have to go with the highest heat that we can possibly manage in the residential environment - a barbecue grill on high.

If you have a large terra cotta pot that was unglazed and free of cracks or blemishes (such as a large plant pot) you could grab yourself a ruler and a pencil and make a line, about 1-inch down and use an angle grinder with a masonry blade. Of course, we would not want this thing to crack when it goes on the heat, so we soak it in plain old water for 8 to 12 hours.  Then, remove it and allow it to dry for one hour.

Sprits a newspaper with vegetable oil and place it in your barbecue. Then add one pound (exactly) of all natural chunk charcoal to your barbecue. Light the newspaper (the vegetable oil will help the paper burn longer) and you will have nice, hot coals.
Place the terra cotta pot over the barbecue grill and let it sit and slowly warm, for 10-minutes.

In the meantime, heat a 12-inch skillet over medium high heat.
Add ? cup of vegetable oil and allow it to heat, almost until it smokes.
Add 1 large chopped onion along with 1 tsp kosher salt and to let the onions really brown, until they are almost chocolate looking around the edges (about 12-minutes).

In the meantime, add another pound of charcoal to the tandoor and leave for another 10-minutes.

Prepare the ginger and chilies
Add 1 tbsp fresh chopped ginger.
Add one Serrano chili (removing the end, seeds and pith ? which have a lot of heat, but not much flavor). Slice into juliennes and cross cut into a 'brunoise'.
Reduce the heat to medium low
Add the ginger and chilies, plus 4 cloves minced garlic.
Stir, and cook for 7-minutes, or until brown.

In the mean time, add another pound of charcoal to the barbecue grill and leave for another 10-minutes.

Stir in another tablespoon of garam masala. By adding some of this to the sauce (which is going to cook at a relatively low temperature) and to the meat (which is going to cook at a very high temperature) you will bring out all the dimensions that the masala has to offer (it?s a very Indian cuisine thing to do).
Add 28 oz of canned diced tomatoes.  Cook this down, until it thickens (about 20-minutes), during which you can skewer the meat.

But first, add another 1 pound of charcoal to the barbecue grill

Use 3/16 inch wide, 27-inch long, nickel plated steel skewers
Before skewering up, grab some rigatoni pasta.
Empty the marinated lamb (and all the marinade) onto a pan.
We want maximum meat-skewer contact, so each time you grab a piece of meat try to go through the longest portion. Next, add a spacer ? the rigatoni pasta (which will prevent the meat from getting all squished up, and it will cook more evenly (it?s not absolutely essential). You should get 6-7 pieces of meat onto each skewer.

Take the temperature of your tandoor (which should be over 800 degrees Fahrenheit)

Put the meat skewers into the tandoor. The venturi, created at the top of the tandoor, which make sure that the meat near the skewer handles will cook properly. Keep moving the skewers, every minute or so, until you have good doneness (about 2 ? minutes, with an 835 degree tandoor). The bottom pieces will be a little bit charred, but this will add to the overall flavor.
Remove the meat from the skewers and place in the pan with the onions, spices and tomatoes.
Place the pan on top of the tandoor.
Add a little extra kosher salt (to correct for seasoning).
Add 1-cup of coconut milk and just stir in.

Stack up 9 or 10 leaves of mint (or cilantro), roll into a tube and then slice, very thinly into ribbons (chiffonade).

Serve with rice


Alternatively, you can use chicken (boned thighs work especially well with this method)."


6
Talk About Anything Other Than Curry / Re: Where in the world?
« on: April 07, 2010, 03:37 PM »
I'm in Las Vegas.  The U.S. is the 27th country I've lived in and Vegas is the 55th city (honest).

7
For those of you in the USA, Monday March 29th there will be an episode of Good Eats (on the Food Network, with Alton Brown) with the title "The Curious Case of Curry".

I seriously doubt that it will will reference BIR in any way what-so-ever, but it might be interesting (his explanation of the science behind the cooking is almost always insightful).

8
Is the "Kashmiri masala" the same as "Kashmiri mirch" i.e. red chili powder?

9
What is the "mix powder"?

10
I'm in complete agreement with CA....I've posted photos and none of them have been a good representation of any of my curries.

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