Thanks for the comments guys.
Quote from: Bengali Bob on January 15, 2014, 11:32 AM
Nearly missed this one. Expected to see a Chinese dish. Very nice CH. Miserly portion though. Be needing 2 naans with that ;D
Can't really expect a megga portion when only using 375ml of base which is reduced, 8 bits of chicken tikka and a couple of cs's of spice Rob. I could up the gravy to get more sauce but that would kind of interfere with how i pre-pack it for normal quantity dishes. What it lacked in quantity it made up for in other ways ;D
Quote from: Garp on January 15, 2014, 11:59 AM
Looks delicious CH, with just the right amount of oil.
But 'two heaped chef spoons of chilli'? Are you serious mate? Is that for one portion? I'd just have to look at that and my tongue and sphincter would join forces to shut down my body.
I used about one and a half cs's of veg ghee plus a heaped tsp of Mr Naga and two tsp of my spiced oil. Yes two cs's of chilli powder for one portion

I'm afraid my body gave up and submitted years ago to the abuse i hurl at it Garp. IMO once you reach a certain quantity of chilli powder in a dish, anymore fails to add to the heat and just changes the texture of the sauce. I would say i reached it or maybe even surpassed that point. Cook it wrong and its a bowl of gritty raw chilli tasting sludge. Get it right and its a chilli heads treat ;D
Quote from: fried on January 15, 2014, 01:08 PM
I'm always curious about these dishes that use huge amounts of dried spice. Do you add loads of extra oil to fry it or add a bit of base and cook it out in that?
I use a little more oil but am quick to add the diluted tomato paste. I then fry for as long as i can. Once it starts sticking to the pan in goes a little gravy to loosen it all up and cook it some more. I then repeat the process once more before adding half the gravy and reducing. Then add the remaining gravy and finish the curry.
If i got it completely wrong it would taste phall :

, get it partly right and it would be edible but one would be more likely to regret the eating of it the next day

Get it right and it's a tasty hot curry with no after affects.