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Messages - Muttley

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1
To ensure that it's really tender it is essential that you cook the lamb such that the liquid is barely boiling. just a small bubble every now and again. This keeps the bulk of the liquid below boiling point which is vital to keep the meat tender when quick cooking.

A double saucepan would be ideal.

2
Cooking Methods / Useful tip for aubergines
« on: November 26, 2008, 05:49 PM »
I'd always found aubergines a pain to prepare as they soak up any amount of oil and so are difficult to initially cook.

Trying to use them without an initial cooking (i.e. at a higher temperature than boiling) yielded indifferent results and on one occasion the damn things never cooked through.

Then one day I thought about what you were trying to do with the initial frying (assuming it was not to get them to soak up oil!) and came to the conclusion that it was largely to caramelise the surface and ensure that enough of the intercellular walls of the inside of the fruit have broken that it will cook through even if it is only heated to boiling point in a thick sauce (my failed cooking was in a vegetarian lasagna).

I decided to try grilling the sliced aubergine and have never looked back. The result (in the finished dish) is exactly the same as if they had been fried (although obviously they will add no oil so an adjustment may be necessary).

It's easy to grill them to a beautiful, even, golden colour and now I never put off making dished that I love but avoided because of the pain of trying to fry the aubergines without starting a global oil crisis.

One word of warning, though: If you forget to check aubergines have an unusual property that they can become burned to a frazzle without making any significant smell in the vicinity so make sure you watch them.

3
Traditional Indian Recipes / Re: Chicken Vindaloo
« on: October 08, 2008, 10:33 AM »
Hi Muttley, he did ask this question 3 years ago, so I suspect he may have got bored waiting for the answer or quite possibly may even be dead by now  ;)

Welcome back btw.

Yes, my answering was intended to be slightly surreal.  :)

4
Traditional Indian Recipes / Re: Chicken Vindaloo
« on: October 07, 2008, 03:30 PM »
Hi , Muttley
Could you please tell me what is the advantage of adding Treacle.
Thanks
ghanna

I'm afraid I don't know.

It was in a recipe I obtained whilst in India and it seems to be very popular with people for whom I've made it - the treacle does definitely add to the flavour without making it actually taste of treacle.

5
Welcome back its been about year since your last post? :o

Yes, I've been away quite a bit, and I do tend to spend far too much time on the 'net once I get going? ::)

Quote
I know you were never a big fan of the BIR curry but have you picked up any new info or tips since you've been away? ;)

Actually, I love BIR curries, it was just that when I first came here I'd been having a lot of success with Indian homestyle cooking, and less with getting a good BIR, so wondered if perhaps we were getting unnecessarily fixated on BIR curries (especially when there are so many great resturaunts in which to eat them :)).

However, I must admit, that now I have a good sauce technique, I do tend to use it because not matter how many wonderful homestyle recipies you make, there's nothing quite like a BIR.

I haven't really got any particular tips. I'd just say to anyone who's trying to cook good Indian food to stick at it, because the satisfaction of creating a really great meal, BIR, homestyle, or a mixture of the two, is considerable.

6
well I'm glad to say that it's worked out great, in fact the sauce looks as near as d*mmit to this authentic one http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=347.0

Tastes & smells good too. I added a medium carrot to the mix and half a green pepper - tastes great on it's own, and I reckon even minimal spicing would produce a good resaurant style curry with this sauce.

Chicken Madras and methi gosht for supper tomorrow, will post the results.

Thanks Muttley :)

Gary
You're welcome.

I must admit that I haven't been here for quite some time :(, and it was rather freaky to see this thread had been added to so recently.

If you look at the rambling version, you'll see that I mention that I'm a little dubious about the need to add tomatoes, and I now always have some with and some without. Certain curries just don't need the extra redness that the tomatoes add.

I make this up in big batches and freeze it in coleslaw containers.

I've also tried adding a little celery with the onions at the start, and although it moves it away from authenticity, I like the (very small) difference it creates.

7
It never ceases to amaze me how no disaffected Bengali chef pops up on any of these forums to tell us exactly how it's done. Instead, they must be laughing their heads off at our desperation, when the precise method is common knowledge to them, produced to popular acclaim every single night in thousands of towns throughout the UK.
It's probably because it's actually so straightforward that it would never occur to them that anyone finds it difficult. And, they probably don't tend to hang around on sites dealing with Indian resturaunt cooking :)

Quote
How long will it be before someone produces a range of DIY home made curries which most people would agree are pretty indistinguishable from the restaurants? Then the search will be over, and this forum can presumably draw to a close. The Internet has been big business for at least six years, but it still hasn't happened!
I'm sure that's possible now, (especially if they were frozen), but I doubt they would ever be that much of a success because even if people did produce really authentic BIR curries, the "going for an Indian" atmosphere just isn't there. Even the atmosphere in your home is different if you get a takeaway, compared to cooking the food yourself.

I've cooked this food using this sauce for dozens of people now, and they all say it produces curries "just like resturaunt ones".

I just popped in to check this original method to see if I'd 'drifted' away from it over the last year.

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Lets Talk Curry / Re: What do you serve with homemade curry?
« on: March 11, 2005, 08:28 AM »
Nan (bought, I'm afraid).
Cucumber Raita
Onion and corriander salad
Basmati rice, into which I add the seeds from 2 cardamom pods, and about 5 corriander seeds with 2 vanes of star anise, the later two (i.e. not the cardamom) lightly crushed so that the pieces are about the same size as the cardamom seeds.
Mango chutnuy and hot lime pickle.

If you just add one thing, make it plenty of fresh corriander leaves.

9
Lets Talk Curry / Re: Coconut Butter
« on: February 13, 2005, 09:32 PM »
I've never heard of it.

I suspect it is what is called 'creamed' coconut which is, in reality, a wax like substance that you get in blocks, and can add to curries to give sweetness with coconut flavour.

Would be most interested if anyones knows otherwise.

10
Lets Talk Curry / A thought on Indiian Meals
« on: February 11, 2005, 12:38 PM »
Sometimes I like to have a very simple meal of rice and one dish, but more often I like to have a variety of differnet dishes, particularly vegetables.

It's obviously impractical to cook 5 or six dihes just for one or two people, so the technique I use now is to make a large batch of each dish and freeze portions in those non-stick 'muffin' tins you can buy (they are a little deeper than the 'fairy cake' ones.

Once the food is frozen, you can decant it into plasitc freezer bags, either having a bag for each dish, or making up meals by adding a 'lump' of each dish to a bag.

Then, when you fancy 'an Indian', you just place them around the edge of a plate and microwave. Add rice in the middle, and you have a fairly complex meal in around 15 mins.

Since no curry I have ever tried has been damaged by freezing, this is an excellent way to enjoy really good food even when you have little time for preparation.

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