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Quote from: Whandsy on February 04, 2013, 10:54 AMQuote from: h4ppy-chris on February 04, 2013, 10:33 AMThe spiced oil is made Jerry, how to make it will be in the Ebook. The spiced oil as never seen a curry, base gravy or onion bhaji.What sort of time frame are you thinking about for the ebook Chris? Lots of intrigued people I'm sure. W6 to 8 weeks, i have a lot video and recipes to sort out, i am working hard on it for you.
Quote from: h4ppy-chris on February 04, 2013, 10:33 AMThe spiced oil is made Jerry, how to make it will be in the Ebook. The spiced oil as never seen a curry, base gravy or onion bhaji.What sort of time frame are you thinking about for the ebook Chris? Lots of intrigued people I'm sure. W
The spiced oil is made Jerry, how to make it will be in the Ebook. The spiced oil as never seen a curry, base gravy or onion bhaji.
a cautious best wishes on the ebook - so many before have promised but only delivered in part. if your's completes the picture then all will very happy.fingers crossed.
Quote from: JerryM on February 04, 2013, 06:27 PMa cautious best wishes on the ebook - so many before have promised but only delivered in part. if your's completes the picture then all will very happy.fingers crossed.I agree, a cautious best wishes, no doubt to some you may well give them that bit extra they're looking for.Other publications may have done the same for some. I think it's too much of a sweeping statement to say that some publications have not delivered all to some.Bert
My BIR cooking today is very much a fusion of a little bit of this and a little bit of that (picked up from manifold sources), underpinned by a few very sound, tried and tested principles that are common to the art. I'm sure it's the same for many here.
KD1 was offered to me as a "leaving gift" from my work colleagues in Cambridge on my last day. I never felt tempted to even try any of her recipes, I got the book before I came across cr0 and was suspicious about the quality of the recipes at the time.
book won't 'deliver all' (because no book can)
Quote from: gagomes on February 06, 2013, 11:33 AMKD1 was offered to me as a "leaving gift" from my work colleagues in Cambridge on my last day. I never felt tempted to even try any of her recipes, I got the book before I came across cr0 and was suspicious about the quality of the recipes at the time. Very different to my own reaction, and subsequent behaviour. I can no longer remember how I learned of the book's existence, but I bought my first copy (yes, I now have several !) with excitement and anticipation, and was ecstatic at my first attempt at a Chicken Madras. After maybe 40 years of complete and utter failure at producing even an /acceptable/ curry (let alone a BIR taste-alike), KD1 was for me the Book of Revelations. With the benefit of experience I modified Kris's recipes (doubling the quantity of spices and -- for some time -- doubling the volume of base, so there was actually four times the quantity of spices per unit weight of chicken), and I still use the modified versions today (sometimes substituting Bassar curry masala for ground chillies). Her method is so different to that commonly advocated today, where the spices inevitably have to be bhooned, if not near-cremated, that it is remarkable how both methods can give such similar results. But similar they most certainly are, and if you have not yet tried KD1 then I think you should do so : you may be very surprised at the results that can be achieved.
Think about some of the best curry dishes you've ever had in an Indian restaurant anywhere. Would it be possible to write down those recipes to repeat them? Of course! Easy. But nobody so far has met my criteria (a) and (b) above. I doubt if that situation will change any time soon.