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Messages - hukkas

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1
Lets Talk Curry / Glasgow Curry Houses - recommendations?
« on: November 03, 2019, 04:03 PM »
Hey!

About twenty years ago, I went for a curry in Glasgow and thought it was one of the best curries I'd ever had.

About fifteen years ago, I went for a curry in Glasgow and thought it was one of the best curries I'd ever had. Suddenly realised it was the same place I'd been five years previously!

I'm never going to find the place I went, and let's face it - restaurants close down, change hands, or otherwise just drop their standards.

However, I've just booked a trip to Glasgow in November, and my experience of BIR there has been nothing short of excellent - so could anyone point me in the direction of a good place?

Thank you in advance!

2
Tandoori and Tikka / Re: Chicken Tikka - better than the BIRs
« on: August 29, 2018, 05:00 PM »
Apologies if someone has suggested this, but it's a really long thread!

I decided to test out a theory; that this marinade would make excellent pakoras.

Here's what I did:

- Made up the marinade as per the recipe. I added chicken breasts, because I was making tikka for a CTM.
- Added some chicken thighs, in slices approx 1.5cm wide
- Marinated overnight
- Patted the chicken thigh slices dry(ish) with kitchen towel
- Added some of the marinade to a bowl (I used a strainer, because my G&G was a little on the chunky side)
- Added gram flour
- Added some additional water
- Added a pinch of additional salt
- Added a little extra Kashmiri chilli powder
- Combined to make a thick batter
- Coated the chicken pieces
- Deep-fried the chicken pieces (about 5-6 mins at about 180 deg C)

In my humble opinion, it worked out really well.

Some pakora sauces seem to be slightly on the acidic side, which I love, but because the marinade is quite citrusy, I reckon a milder - perhaps yoghurt-based - sauce might be better with it. But whatever floats your boat!

3
I know this is an old question, but I recognise the technique with the coal that Dajoca mentioned; it's done in quite a few recipes on "Cook  with Faiza"; for example with this keema recipe - http://www.cookwithfaiza.net/behari-keema-recipe/ -which has a video so you can see it done.

(I haven't tried it myself, I need to find somewhere that sells tiny bags of coal!)

4
Ceylon / Re: CA's Chicken Ceylon
« on: June 22, 2018, 07:06 AM »
I'd never heard of a ceylon. Perhaps it's described on menus as mild and/or sweet, in which case I'd likely skim straight past it.

Sure enough, 3tsp of sugar would've made it far too sweet for my liking, but with 1tsp and a couple of small green chillies and it was absolutely superb. This one's a keeper.

5
Thanks Hukkas. I will be in Manchester so will definitely take the time to visit those two.

I think I went to Akbar's during a visit a few years ago. If its the place I remember they served family size naan on these antler-looking holders at the tables. Personally I wasn't thrilled by this place. I gave it about a 6 out of 10.
Got to admit I wasn't all that impressed with it either, although that was partly down to the whole dining experience - packed in like sardines. It's highly thought of, though.

Might be worth trying eastZeast; there's the long-standing one on Princess Street near Oxford Road, as well as a newer sister restaurant on Deansgate.

The one thing I would say about Manchester is that other than Mughli, as Ghoulie mentioned earlier and maybe Spicy Hut, Rusholme might be "the curry mile" but it's generally pretty mediocre, in my experience. You'd think the competition would drive up standards!

Enjoy your trip!

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Lets Talk Curry / Re: "chicken tarka"
« on: February 10, 2017, 09:50 PM »
A few recipes for this online if you google it
I have Googled it, many times - but the results are completely different to what I know as chicken tarka.

7
If in Manchester - try the Jai Kathmandu, Palatine Rd., Northenden.  Also Mughli Charcoal Pit, Wilmslow Rd, Rusholme.
Agree with those. There's also Akbars in the city centre (ish), although it's often extremely busy and they don't take bookings.

8
Lets Talk Curry / "chicken tarka"
« on: February 09, 2017, 07:34 AM »
I've put the subject in quotes, because I'm not referring to tarka in the usual sense.

There's a curry-house in my home town that does a curry they call a tarka, which I've only ever seen in one other place - literally just up the road. It's always been my go-to option, but unfortunately the guy who runs the place doesn't do very much of the cooking these days, and the younger fella who's usually in the kitchen doesn't do it nearly as well.

It's made with vinegar, soya sauce, yoghurt and fairly large rounds of chill - like those pickled jalapenos you get in jars, but less tart. I guess it's a bit like an achari, and a little like a vindaloo.

I've tried making it countless times, but I've never got it right - as you can imagine with vinegar, if you get that bit wrong then it's ruined.

Anyone seen a curry like it, whether it's called the same thing or not? Or better still, has mastered it?

9
Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Re: Only just found this
« on: February 09, 2017, 07:24 AM »
Which recipes in Rick Stein's Indian book are worth a try?
The kati rolls are excellent, served up with a really nice pickled onion & green chilli salad.

The lamb dopiaza is worth trying, partly because it's such an unusual cooking method. You basically add all of the ingredients to a cold pan - no roasting or grinding spices, no frying the onions, no browning the meat - then pop it on a low heat for a few hours. Couldn't be simpler, but turns out great.

The chicken pickle is very, very good too.

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Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Re: Only just found this
« on: February 08, 2017, 11:04 AM »
I am from Scotland

The best curry I ever had was in Glasgow - can't for the life of me remember where, unfortunately. I had an amazing curry in the same city years later, then it suddenly dawned on me I was in the same restaurant!

Also, continuing the Scotland theme, I used to live in Aberdeen and there was a place that did a couple of really interesting additions - one port, one with Guinness. They were both interesting, if not spectacular, and I'm not sure I've seen either since!

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