Login with username, password and session length
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
i made meat and saag for me old man and he said it was delicious but too hot for him . i had replaced paprika with deggi mirch. oh well, lesson learnt. deggi mirch isnt mild enough for some.All the while over the 2 days of eating i couldnt understand what that horrible dominant flavour was. i'd put it down to the tinned spinach that me old man had in his cupboard, only to later realise it was the natco gm.
I'm sure many members will comment on this question. By the way, if we don't question, we don't learn IMHO, it's not so much the make that is important but the freshness of the spices. Always buy small quantities, which means that they'll be used up fairly quickly and replaced with fresher. This is most important with ground spice. Whole spice keeps a lot longer than ground. Keeping spices in the dark and in airtight containers will help maintain their condition.I won't even begin to comment on garam masala. There is loads of discussion as to when it's used, if it's used, should it be used, which type, what it is, what it does etc. etc. You can read many of the threads at your leisure.As for spice brands, the most popular ones tend to be Rahja, TRS, East End and Natco. Some restaurants may prefer certain brands. The Ashoka thread contains a preference for East End. Some purchase based on price alone, with Rajah being the more expensive. Not sure whether this helps but i'm sure others will chip in.
How long do folk keep their ground spices assuming correctly stored before ditching them?
...are both these brands good exceptable curry making materials or are there better ones i should be using?
Quote from: uclown2002 on April 01, 2013, 01:40 PMHow long do folk keep their ground spices assuming correctly stored before ditching them?I throw them away when they've gone stale or lost their pungency It's hard to put an exact time frame on that really. As CH rightly points out ground spices can and will go stale fairly quickly after the packet is opened regardless of how well they're stored. Stored correctly they'll simply stay fresh longer than if not stored correctly.The only real way of knowing is to observe the smell from the container when you open it, if you get a nice whiff of what the spice should smell like, it should still be fresh, if you have to stick your nose right inside the container to smell anything at all, it's a pretty sure sign the spice has lost its pungency. Obviously some spices are naturally more pungent than others so you need to factor that in.If you're still not sure, fry up some g/g paste and some chopped onions, fry a tsp of spice in the mix, let it cool and taste it. You'll soon know.