Quote from: joshallen2k on October 03, 2012, 02:09 AM
Bob - your mass production curry exploits have got me thinking... over here in Canada, most Indian Restaurants focus on the buffet style. Large plates of various curries etc under heat lamps, replenished as they get eaten, or just turn foul.
This type of Indian restaurant, I cannot stand. Awful curries. I'd rather eat McDonalds.
Since learning BIR cooking - base plus mains cooked on demand - I can see why the "buffet" style could never replicate what I remember as proper BIR.
You seem to be doing it with the Taz base and established cr0 main recipes. Does it scale well? Why don't the buffet guys do it? Cost?
Just curious what you think.
Cheers and great work,
-- Josh
Hi Josh,
Yes it does scale well. With Taz's Base, all I have done is quadrupled the quantities, (largest base I have ever made), using 8 litres of water, 4kg onions, 4 green peppers, 24 garlic cloves cut in half, 4 x 2 x 1 inch pieces of ginger, 6 tbps Turmeric, 6 tbs of both Coriander & Cumin seeds, 1.6 litres of oil, 4 desert spoons of salt. Oh, and I use 1.6kg chopped tinned tomatoes.
I have started cooking the onions in the oil first until soft and translucent, then adding everything else, simmering for about and hour and a half, (time doesn't seem to matter too much when working in a commercial kitchen as there is always something else to do whilst waiting), then blend to a smooth liquid, then return to a low heat until the oil separates.
I've discovered cooking the chicken in trays in the ovens first at 180 degrees for about 15 minutes, gets it three quarters of the way there. Make the sauce in a large "Brat Pan", then add the chicken and cook for a further 10 minutes on a low heat just to finish the chicken off, which comes out so succulent.
I can only think the buffet guys don't do it as they are probably making a lot more dishes than say my 3 or 4 which is time consuming, but shouldn't be if everyone pulls their weight in the kitchen.... It's easy to prep in between services and par cook or marinade something a couple of days in advance
