His cooking technique is what I'm asking about, he pretty much puts all the ingredients in together and boils the dish?
Ed
This method doesn't work for me the same way that the BB1 Glasgow curries don't.
I said from day one that the method was suspect and I was right.
I've been living in Scotland (just outside of Glasgow) on and off now for almost 2 years. And for the first year, eating 1-2 curries a week from dozens of different takeaways And restaurants , until I said enoughs enough!
For the last few months of that period. I would only order a staff curry until I finally came to my senses and admitted defeat. I didn't want to eat any more lamb or chicken tej patta (AKA staff curry) even if they were on the bone and looked fabulous.
The main problem with this method is with the g/g paste and the spices.
Almost every curry I've tried has a dominant flavour of raw garlic and ginger and is devoid of spice. The only curries I'd recommend in Scotland would be the desi style dishes mostly ordered from the smaller Pakistani places.
You
can get lucky with your local if you can arrange for them to make you a one-off special desi dish, but I've gambled and been disappointed too many times now so will stick with the Pakistani outlets.
Cheers, Frank.
