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Really Phil? You were the one person that i thought would understand being married into a Chinese/Vietnamese family. EVERY Indian in the world knows and uses the word "gravy"!
Would you really mispronounce words in a derogatory way in a Chinese kitchen so that they would understand you?
If one of your best friends came to your house and then asked one of your wife's family who's English wasn't perfect, "so how do you make your special flied lice?" Would you still think of it as affectionate?
Probably for similar reasons that garam masala is sometimes sprinkled over a dish before serving. I know my rajah tandoori masala has a sweet floral almost chocolaty aroma and taste uncooked.
And can you list the ingredients of your Rajah tandoori masala, as it is something that I do not possess ...
How can the spices in the masala cook for long enough to allow their essential oils to leach out into the dish ?
Quote from: rallim on February 15, 2013, 02:06 PMOh and the red sauce nonsense, It's a fact, and used in a lot of Indian restaurants, 1 recipe I have: tomato sauce, lemon juice, sugar, tinned fruit, mango chutney and a couple of other ingredients this restaurant used..best patia ever.rallim are you Scottish because I have a feeling that's a 'standard' pathia sauce way up North. Down here though, unless things have changed (and I could easily believe they may have), the pathia tends to be made up from individual ingredients rather than a preprepared sauce.
Oh and the red sauce nonsense, It's a fact, and used in a lot of Indian restaurants, 1 recipe I have: tomato sauce, lemon juice, sugar, tinned fruit, mango chutney and a couple of other ingredients this restaurant used..best patia ever.