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I know what you mean Phil. But I don't need recipes for any of these dishes. Have perfectly good ones, some probably better, already stored in my head. But what else can we learn from watching the vids, so far? I haven't learned a thing. It could be that I don't know what to look for, in which case a detailed explanation to accompany (at least one of the vids) would be a bonus. I seem to remember Sam suggested something on the lines of he was doing pretty much the same thing from dish-to-dish, but I could be wrong. If this is the case though there is really not much point me watching the vids. Get my drift?
Quote from: Bengali Bob on September 05, 2013, 12:36 PMI think the video(s) are nice. However as yet I'm not particularly inspired to try any of the recipes out; nothing grabbing me as being particularly interesting, or new. A competent chef making for the most part standard curries. This is not a criticism. As I say, very nice. To be fair to Chris, a competent chef making standard curries is exactly what I would want to see. I have no interest in (e.g.,) "Mongolian yak mussaman"; I want to see the basic BIR repertoire being prepared and cooked from start to finish, because if I could master that it would give me far more confidence that I could master the more esoteric dishes. Biryani, Bhuna, Bombay, Dhansak, Madras, Vindaloo, and some basic side dishes (Bombay aloo, mushroom bhaji, onion bhaji, sag aloo) -- get those ten under your belt and the rest should be (relatively) easy. Oh, and add chapati and keema naan -- take it up to a round dozen ** Phil.
I think the video(s) are nice. However as yet I'm not particularly inspired to try any of the recipes out; nothing grabbing me as being particularly interesting, or new. A competent chef making for the most part standard curries. This is not a criticism. As I say, very nice.