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Quote from: Axe on March 04, 2013, 04:53 PMQuote from: gazman1976 on March 04, 2013, 04:48 PMHi Chris this book is taking AGES lol, why not poste a recipe for a side dish so we can examine it and take it from there instead of all this waiting? just a thoughtThat's a great idea, i'd love to try the Madras recipe. I think you are taking side-dish to the extreme Axe ;-)
Quote from: gazman1976 on March 04, 2013, 04:48 PMHi Chris this book is taking AGES lol, why not poste a recipe for a side dish so we can examine it and take it from there instead of all this waiting? just a thoughtThat's a great idea, i'd love to try the Madras recipe.
Hi Chris this book is taking AGES lol, why not poste a recipe for a side dish so we can examine it and take it from there instead of all this waiting? just a thought
I offer myself to be the first purchaser of the book.Pitch: as I'm a novice cook, one would gauge based on my ability to use the recipes successfully and based on my reports whether the book is worth it or not : ;D :-X
In my opinion this is a genuine intention to extend our knowledge of TA practices rather than a money making exercise, an ebook like this isn't going to generate huge revenues anyway as we BIR fanatics are very much a minority, in fact it's likely Julian only did it to raise awareness of his business. As I reported a while back I had a chef from my local round and although he did a better job than me it wasn't close to what he sells over the counter.At the time I accepted it was probably my supermarket spices at fault but have since realised this wasn't the case.What H4ppy-Chis has undertaken with his friend is a suggestion I mentioned in a previous post, except he points out a killer factor, having a bonified chef round with all the right ingredients/tools demonstrating how he makes curry in a TA even without a language barrier still isn't enough. The Chef has to WANT us t learn correctly, its a more intimate procedure than I at first realised, this is my belief and why I think this ebook will be written with the best intentions even if is not written particularly well. I also think accompanying videos are a must and I have no problem with the presentation, its not at all important.Looking back at my lesson I wouldn't say I got duped but rather that the Chef probably didn't feel it was that important to try too hard. I say this because many posts have mentioned that TA staff are often surprised we like eating this non-traditional stuff in the first place and time was quite an issue as he arrived late and had to get back to his TA for 4PM.Although I stopped making curries a few months back as nothing was improving I still think its possible to get there and that the way H4ppy-Chris is going about it is the only way it will happen, with extensive help from an experienced professional. I vow to support this venture by buying it ASAP.
In my opinion this is a genuine intention to extend our knowledge of TA practices rather than a money making exercise, an ebook like this isn't going to generate huge revenues anyway as we BIR fanatics are very much a minority, in fact it's likely Julian only did it to raise awareness of his business. As I reported a while back I had a chef from my local round and although he did a better job than me it wasn't close to what he sells over the counter.At the time I accepted it was probably my supermarket spices at fault but have since realised this wasn't the case.What H4ppy-Chis has undertaken with his friend is a suggestion I mentioned in a previous post, except he points out a killer factor, having a bonified chef round with all the right ingredients/tools demonstrating how he makes curry in a TA even without a language barrier still isn't enough. The Chef has to WANT us to learn correctly, its a more intimate procedure than I at first realised, this is my belief and why I think this ebook will be written with the best intentions even if is not written particularly well. I also think accompanying videos are a must and I have no problem with the presentation, its not at all important.Looking back at my lesson I wouldn't say I got duped but rather that the Chef probably didn't feel it was that important to try too hard. I say this because many posts have mentioned that TA staff are often surprised we like eating this non-traditional stuff in the first place and time was quite an issue as he arrived late and had to get back to his TA for 4PM.Although I stopped making curries a few months back as nothing was improving I still think its possible to get there and that the way H4ppy-Chris is going about it is the only way it will happen, with extensive help from an experienced professional. I vow to support this venture by buying it ASAP.
Quote from: prawnsalad on March 15, 2013, 12:29 AMIn my opinion this is a genuine intention to extend our knowledge of TA practices rather than a money making exercise, an ebook like this isn't going to generate huge revenues anyway as we BIR fanatics are very much a minority, in fact it's likely Julian only did it to raise awareness of his business. As I reported a while back I had a chef from my local round and although he did a better job than me it wasn't close to what he sells over the counter.At the time I accepted it was probably my supermarket spices at fault but have since realised this wasn't the case.What H4ppy-Chis has undertaken with his friend is a suggestion I mentioned in a previous post, except he points out a killer factor, having a bonified chef round with all the right ingredients/tools demonstrating how he makes curry in a TA even without a language barrier still isn't enough. The Chef has to WANT us t learn correctly, its a more intimate procedure than I at first realised, this is my belief and why I think this ebook will be written with the best intentions even if is not written particularly well. I also think accompanying videos are a must and I have no problem with the presentation, its not at all important.Looking back at my lesson I wouldn't say I got duped but rather that the Chef probably didn't feel it was that important to try too hard. I say this because many posts have mentioned that TA staff are often surprised we like eating this non-traditional stuff in the first place and time was quite an issue as he arrived late and had to get back to his TA for 4PM.Although I stopped making curries a few months back as nothing was improving I still think its possible to get there and that the way H4ppy-Chris is going about it is the only way it will happen, with extensive help from an experienced professional. I vow to support this venture by buying it ASAP.Great post PS. I have to agree with you too. However, besides the technique which chefs don't seem to pass up properly, there is also more to the equipment and volumes of preparation in a TA/BIR than we can afford to do at homeIn any case, I thought everyone already knew that h4ppy-chris has finally found the taste and explained it clearly in this post: I have finally found that missing taste the one we are all looking for. :
and don't need a big burner.