Quote from: commis on March 19, 2013, 08:51 PMIt's been muted for a while that BIR is not as good as it use to be. Could that correlate to the introduction of comercial practices and kit.
It's an interesting thought and subject.
In my own personal opinion, as I've posted elsewhere on the forum, I rather suspect it's down to commercial BIR expediency in terms of streamlining their processes to make it quicker and easier to produce a wide range of dishes from a suite of ingredients that are simple and easy to produce.
It's about minimising inputs and maximising outputs.
Earlier, older style Indian Restaurants seem more of a fusion of traditional methods adapted for a modern commercial kitchen environment producing traditional dishes modified for the British taste. So they hadn't fully left their traditional roots in terms of ingredients, methods and cooking techniques but had started a transformation from traditional to modern methods.
This is purely supposition on my behalf based on my own experience and snippets gleaned from here and there.
I'm currently reading through many of my older traditional Indian cookbooks to try and understand how traditional recipes were constructed and with what ingredients and how these recipes could have been adapted for production in a more modern commercial kitchen environment.
That might give me some clues as to how to recreate these 30-40 year old, old school dishes as I feel I've pretty much gone as far as I want to with regards to modern BIR cooking and dishes. Like a restaurant, all I seem to be doing is creating similar tasting dishes with minimal variation because the base sauce and mix powder is dominating the underlying flavour. They may look different but they don't taste that different!
I want to get back to quite significant taste changes between dishes but without necessarily departing too far from the current modern methods.