"And in his den you sometimes meet
With curry fit for man to eat"
Stone Talk by Sir Richard Burton 1865
I was raised in the UK during the 1940s and 50s to know curry as a yellow concoction, done up with raw curry powder and having raisins and bits of apple added; I had my first real curry in London in 1960. It was a chicken curry, off the bone, with pilau rice and it completely blew me away. That 'Pakistani' (today we'd say Bangladeshi) restaurant has long vanished but I often wonder how I would enjoy that same meal today. The restaurant was badly ventilated and had 'the smell' - the curry definitely had a lot of oil (probably ghee back then) and I don't doubt that the cooking methods were very similar to those we discuss here. Even then, there were quite a lot of 'Indian' restaurants in London (maybe twenty in the S. Ken/Chelsea/Fulham area) - but there were virtually none at all in the provinces that I ever saw. Tandoori had not yet arrived but although restaurants had big differences, most were pretty authentic 'BIR' tasting. You could get a good square meal of meat and rice for about five shillings (25p)! That was great for students.
Of course we tried to duplicate restaurant curries at home; buying numerous recipe books and of course you can predict the results!
Since then I reckon I have had well over a thousand curries - and I have tried them in lots of places. Regional tastes reflect local preferences of course - just as you are more likely to get a 'sweet' curry in the UK provinces (yuk). Japanese love curry, but it's more the Chinese sort - quite 'yellow' and not hot - but the supposed authentic curries I tried there were very mild and, yes, a bit sweet. Murthu's in Singapore is one of the very best I have ever had, but the absolute worst was in Iasi, Romania, where a Bangladeshi fellow had put up a sign - what he made wasn't recognizable as curry. I've had some excellent curries in the USA and Canada and, maybe surprisingly, a pretty good one in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. I have faith there are good curries in Australia but I haven't found one yet.
Can you tell that I suffer from a serious addiction?
Spotty