Quote from: Phil [Chaa006] on March 19, 2013, 02:21 PMOf /course/ it matters what a bhuna looks like : we eat first with our eyes, then with our nose, and only finally with our taste buds. If it doesn't look right, it won't taste right, no matter how skillfully prepared.
Not in my opinion.
It's about taste, taste, taste and taste again. Looks have nothing whatsoever to do with taste and I'll prove my point to you in what may be (for you) a painful way, but no offence is intended in anyway.
Take a look at your chicken liver dish here:
https://curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php/topic,11717.msg91816.html#msg91816I can tell you what I think that looks like with a bit of coriander sprinkled on top, but you might think me somewhat rude in saying so.
However, given your recipe and how you've cooked it, what I think it looks like has nothing to do with my inclination to want to taste it.
On the other hand, given the popularity of the generally radioactive looking bright red dishes that seem to dominate this site, which I personally find very unattractive, partially because I know that colour has been achieved by lots of tomato puree, Kashmiri chilli's/paprika and even red food dye, I have no inclination to want to taste them at all.
Quote from: Phil [Chaa006] on March 19, 2013, 02:21 PMI have eaten green tandoori chicken, and it tasted abominable : no matter how much I said to myself "the colour doesn't matter", it /did/ matter, and that is a basic fact of cuisine and the culinary art that we just have to accept.
And in my opinion Tandoori Murgh Haryali, chicken marinated in spinach and spices has been and continues to be one of the very nicest tandoori dishes I've so far tasted and provides a very nice alternative to the traditional tandoori and chicken tikka dishes at everywhere produces these days.
As is so often the way on here, our opinions on this subject are almost diametrically opposed.
I couldn't disagree with you more.