I've been talking with an Indian porter from our kitchen quite a lot lately. He is from Kerala (South India) and did quite a bit of cooking back home albeit traditional Indian food. He taught me how to make a Kerala'n Chicken Biriyani the other week which was fabulous and nowhere near a BIR.
It was when we were making this that he produced a packet (made from newspaper) which contained Garam masala. I inquired about this and he said that this is the one he makes himself (not shop bought). I was really impressed with this as it was nothing like the Garam Masala we normally buy in shops, like the TRS and Natco brands, which for me I don't really like or use as they contain too much cloves and cinnamon, which I personally find too overpowering for curries.
Yesterday, he came in with some packets of spices and we set about to make the one he uses at home.
Here are the results.
One packet contained just Mace, the other packet contained:
Whole Coriander
Whole Cumin
Dalchini (Cloves)
Whole Black Pepper
Elcho (Black Cardamom)
Bay Leaves
Cloves
We emptied both packets into a frying pan and also added 5 more Bay Leaves and 2 tsp ground Nutmeg. He said that they normally use whole nutmeg, but we didn't have any in the kitchen only ground Nutmeg.
We roasted the spices until the Coriander seeds turned slightly brown, then withdrew from the heat and then ground to a fine powder.
The aroma is stunning. A bit like spices freshly toasted and ground with a hint of what I can only describe as freshly ground coffee. This stuff is wonderful and I then went on to make a single Madras which several staff tried and then I added a sprinkle of this new Garam masala and cooked in for 2-3 minutes. The depth of flavour increased the Madras and I now want to try it with other dishes that specifically use Garam Masala. Unfortunately due to lack of time, will not be till next week, but will post the results.
Mace Packet

Whole Spice Packet

Whole Spice Packet Ingredients

Whole Spices In Pan

Whole Spices Roasted

Finished Garam Masala. Note the Commercial one on the right (Lighter Brown) compared to the one we made.
