I regularly receive requests from work colleagues for onion bhajis, but more so for samosas, as their appearance tends to be somewhat rarer :

As those of you who make them from scratch will know, that whilst the process is simple, the time it takes from start to finish if making any quantity is substantial. Whenever i make them it's always a minimum of 2 dozen. I could easily make 4 dozen but these too would disappear in no time at all. It's great that my fellow workers enjoy my food and want it as often as they can get it, but they fail to realise the work and more so the time involved in providing it.
In order to satisfy their yearnings whilst at the same time reduce the time period I spend in the kitchen, I decided to try and break the process down and see if i could spread the steps over a day or so rather than having to do the whole thing in one go.
Filling, not a problem. Prepare one day and use whenever.
Dough and preparing the pastry for the cones - here was the issue. The dough is no effort but the rolling out, filling and frying all together is, espeically when doing 2 dozen plus.
So i decided to prepare the dough and roll out the pastry and prepare as i normally do and then wrap, seal and leave for a day or so to see what impact it had on the pastry when i tried to make the cone, fill it, seal it and then fry it. This is all with a view to freezing it in future so that the time spent at any one session is greatly reduced.
Here's the results:


Results are in: in terms of quality, all samosas devoured and loads of satisfied groans and ahh's received. So no impact on product quality

Time wise: I can knock out enough pastry for 24 cones in less than an hour without the need to then have to stand there, fill them, seal them and then fry them.
Definitely the way to go. Final check is to make, freeze, defrost then finish them.
Yet again my guinea pigs get fed ;D ;D and i don't spend the entire afternoon working on samosas :

EDIT
I forgot to add, the 2 dozen i took in last week prior to the experimental batch, were accompanied by CBM's tamarind sauce diluted to make a dipping sauce. They all raved about this and it too was promptly devoured and then added to the standing order along with the samosas

I just knew it would make a perfect accompaniment to samosas and onion bhajis. LUSH
