Quote from: JerryM on April 20, 2011, 05:56 PM
the thing for me though is that a biryani is only as good as the curry sauce to have with it.
Now that is an interesting observation, because I
never (
really never) eat the sauce with the biryani. Sometimes I may have a little afterwards, but for me the key to the biryani is that it has to be moist enough (the lamb, not the rice) for me to enjoy it just as it comes. In the restaurant, we had stuffed kazana and Taj chingri as starters (swapped half way), tandoori mixed grill with bhindi bhaji, mushroom bhaji & naan for the entree, and the biryani as the main course; needless to say, starters + entree were almost sufficient (I'd pigged out on Madras papadom at home before setting off, so as to keep the ancillaries costs down), so we managed only 50% of the biryani between us. I finished it up for lunch today (microwaved under clingfilm for one minute) and the only thing I added was some Chinthe lime pickle. Wonderful !
Quoteps my local restaurant in their special biryani even include a few whole green pea's along the lines of marrowfat. i always remark to myself on there inclusion but they do seem to work. it beats me on how they are firm like a garden pea but not sweet.
Yes, I've seen peas, and even carrots, but the finest biryani I ever saw was in the Agra Restaurant in Whitfield Street, near Warren Street tube station : it was garnished with gold and silver leaf, the only time in my life I have ever seen that done. That would have been about 40 years ago!
** Phil.