Was in a rush recently and thinking what to do with some reduced price fresh chicken fillets. Found an unopened box of Riya's Tandoori Masala Mix in the cupboard. Have tried this packet masala before. It is sold at Asda. About 85 p I recall. Previously made a fair few additions to the marinade mix (g/g paste, yogurt, green cardamom/mace etc) and it came out only fair. This time I just chucked about half the powder into a bowl with a good slug of veg oil and a squirt of lemon juice. Halved the chicken fillets and mixed in. Left for a couple of hours in the fridge. Popped them on a disposable barbecue, which turned out to be a dud. It must have been damp; just could not get it going properly. So transferred to the micro combination oven. When cooked and cooled all but one of the fillet halves went in the freezer. Gave the tester mini fillet a reheat later in the evening.

Pic of marinade. No added food colouring; already in the mix
Very surprised with the result. First thought was this is a top drawer BIR Tandoori taste. It was spot on. Took me back to my Manchester, Rusholme days. Can even see the red food colouring leaching out of it. The oven cooked chicken texture was all wrong though. Back in the mid-80s early 90s, I am fairly certain most Tandoori chicken made in Rusholme had never seen the inside of a tandoor. Rather, it was steam cooked and finished off (brushed with oil) on a griddle. The texture of steamed chicken is unmistakable. Mighty fine.
Hoping to reproduce the Manchester Tandoori Chicken starter properly. Feeling confident for now, with this packet mix. I'll use skinless chicken quarters. Probably 48 hours marinade. My manky iron skillet pan is soaking in caustic soda as I type. It will come up like new. I will add more pictures when sorted. Getting back on track. A few other utensils may need dunking in the caustic.
Just reminiscing here. One of my first jobs as a youth was with an industrial cleaning company. We did kitchens. Hospitals, Granada studios and the like. No messing about. Several 20 kg bags of caustic in large portable plastic vats with boiling water for the oven fittings. On one job we were finishing the rinsing and seemed to have lost a particularly large (over 3 feet wide) grill pan. "It must be in there somewhere", someone said. We poured out the last of the caustic water down the drain and there, at the bottom, were two grill pan handles. The grill itself was made of aluminium! Dissolved it. We kept quiet about this for some time.
This packet spice may have other BIR applications.
Rob
What have I done wrong inserting a photo?