Hi Derek
Please explain the taste you are missing; people who have tasted my curries reckon they are better than takeaways they have had, and some have commented that they also have they same taste but far more flavour than the takeaways of old.
I always thought i could make a reasonable curry until I came across this site, about four years ago; now I believe I am making the best curries that I ever have. I think its a great compliment to my cooking when friends arrive at my house and tell me "if it tastes as good as it smells then we are in for a treat", they never go away disappointed.
There is a wealth of information on this site and I have said many times in the past takeaways and BIR are just getting money for old rope I stopped buying off them years ago because I was really disappointed with them.
How do you actually go about cooking your curries. I myself heat oil in a wok add garlic/ginger paste,tomato puree, raw chicken, then I add the spices (chili,deggi murgh,cumin,coriander and garam masalla) stirring all the time making sure the chicken don't go brown then I add a little water to make it all into a massala paste, don't get me wrong the spices will get in the throat until you have become accustomed to it.
I then add a couple of chef's spoon of base sauce, one at a time I don't add another spoonfull until the oil floats each time and season it this whole process takes about 10 minutes or so but I am cooking at the highest heat I possibly can.
If I find that there is too much oil present after cooking then I just take off the excess oil.
I'm sure other members have very different ways of cooking, this just works for me when I'm making a madras or vindaloo I feel you get a better taste when you cook the spices in oil and not add them to the base sauce as the curry secret suggests(although I still think this was a good book) when I started out cooking curries.
Moving the spices around in the wok when you add them is essential as you do not want to burn them always add a little water this will help.