Inspired by my efforts with Anjum Anand's
Rustic Rogan Josh last night, I set out tonight to replicate the methodology but starting from scratch. I started by finely chopping 2 1/2 brown onions and then frying them in spiced oil in the wok until they were starting to colour, then added some faux cinnamon, crushed green cardamom, curry leaves, methi leaves, torn Indian bay and some kala jeera. When all seemed nicely fried, I added a good tablespoon of g/g paste, fried that until it too seemed done, then added the lamb. I then quickly removed it again because I realised I hadn't yet cut it into curry-sized pieces ! Once cut it went back in the pan and was fried in the sauteed onions and whole masala until it started to brown. Over the next few minutes I added and fried two teaspoons of turmeric, three of Kashmiri mirch, two of cumin and two of methi. And plenty of sea salt. As I was frying the ground spices they started to stick, so I kept freeing them by adding more oil and/or some of yesterday's lamb stock. When all was properly fried I added the remainder of the stock (not a lot : maybe half a cup), stirred well, put on the lid, turned the power down to 20%, and then cooked for a further 1H30, stirring every now and then. The taste changed quite dramatically during the 1H30, from one in which the flavour and heat of the Kashmiri mirch completely predominated to a quite different, fully integrated, rich pleasant spicy flavour. Having just tried a piece of the lamb, I realise that 1H30 isn't sufficient for the 450gm of lamb that I cooked (last night was only 300gm), so it has just gone back on for at least another 30 minutes. All in all, a very successful experiment, and one which I will undoubtedly repeat : whilst BIR-style has enormous benefits in terms of economy of time when cooking a chicken-based dish, lamb requires so long that the benefits of a pre-cooked base seem to me to be completely lost.
** Phil.