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Messages - Pakora King

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1
Many thanks SP, can't wait to try the pakora!

2
I've uploaded a copy of the book to your Dropbox Pakora King, hope you enjoy it - I'd say that as a fellow Scot the books base doesn't quite hit the spot for me (resulting curry too sweet) but the sides recipes are great, but give it a go and see what you reckon, you may be pleasantly surprised

Would you mind sending me a copy? Another exiled Scot here missing the real thing!

https://www.dropbox.com/request/RPwSJGf7M8fqd3253TIa

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I've got it but there appears to be no way to attach documents to messages. First time I've had the need so never noticed before. I wonder if that facility can be added if it isn't just the case that I'm not looking in the right place?

If you're willing to share I'd be grateful, I think this might work if you upload it to this link:-

https://www.dropbox.com/request/IdpWl6QToQ7Ap3t5PPCp

Many thanks

4
Anyone know how to get a copy of Alex's book these days?

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Lets Talk Curry / Re: Meat tenderness
« on: April 26, 2021, 02:30 PM »
Good to know it's not a Halal thing. I've made many beef and lamb curries over the years using standard methods involving cooking for over an hour in the pot, recently I tried a 5 hour slow cooker method and the lamb was still tough enough to almost need a steak knife to cut it.

In days of old in the Glasgow places you didn't need a knife at all, a fork was usually sufficient and the meat always melted in the mouth. Over the years I've tried stewing steak/chuck steak/cubed lamb from the supermarket etc. always with similar results. Surely you shouldn't have to tenderise, I've never seen this mentioned in any recipe?

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Lets Talk Curry / Meat tenderness
« on: April 24, 2021, 05:08 PM »
Has anyone got any tips for the holy grail of achieving the amazing tender lamb and beef of the BIRs of old?

Many recipes I see say eg use chuck or stewing steak for curries as if it doesn't matter - I've never found that, if you start with tough meat, you'll end up with the same. Only tried the slow cooker a couple of times but was disappointed there also.

So what's best, do you just get the best you can afford or would a Halal butcher be a better option?

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You must have got lucky in Dublin, most of the curry houses here aren't a patch on the UK; some really good Asian and Japanese places but not so much Indian in my experience.

Watched both the youtube recipes - the first one the sauce looked very watery, the second one the fresh leaves looked very evident in the finished dish.

What I remember is just tender cubes of lamb (goat/mutton?) in a dark green, almost black thick sauce tasting like the methi (not sure if fresh or dried) has completely melted into it; neither of those looks like the one.

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I'm in Dublin, plenty of Indian shops here so I can ask for goat or mutton.

Phil - thanks for that info, is there a start-to-finish recipe for the methi gosht?

10
Thanks Phil, that is very interesting re mutton/goat instead of lamb. I'd be more than willing to try it but can't say I've ever seen either for sale anywhere, would you have any pointers on where to get some?

I did trawl the web and came up with the slow cooker recipe I ended up trying, but with the 2 above issues, apart from that it did taste pretty good.

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