I went for my usual Friday night curry,a different place from my usual but both the food and service were both excellent.Anyway halfway through the meal the Manager came up and we got talking about all things BIR.I told him about my cooking skills/lessons etc and he was very impressed,I told him I had my own tandoori oven and then he realised I wasn't pulling his leg.
Anyway,it turns out his chef uses two gravies(or garabis as he called them).One for spicy dishes and one for mild,non-spicy dishes.I said this was unusual to me and he said that's just the way his chef likes to do it.He said his chef puts very little oil in his gravies,no scooping off the top of the gravy to start a dish,just plain vegetable oil.He said an oily gravy means oily curries-no good.The main thing though to making BIR curries is the garabi,if this is not right then the curries will not have 'that' taste.He said this a few times and said it was very,very important your gravy is cooked right.
I cheekily asked him if I could get a sample of his gravies and he smiled and said ok.Off he went into the kitchen(it was open planned so you could see what was going on).I watched the chef spoon the gravies into some foil dishes and he looked highly amused.He then came out and shook my hand and said in all the years of being a chef no-one has ever asked him for a sample of his garabi.He kindly labelled the up for me.
Anyway here is the mild gravy,its actually in two separate dishes....


The first one was really,really watery.Not much taste at all,just a hint of star anise,more a like a stock than a gravy.The second was like a thick paste,tasting just really of coconut(no sugar)and little else.
I couldn't work out how these were actually used by the chef,the manager had a strong accent and was hard to understand at times.He said they were used for all mild dishes,kormas,massalas etc.It was certainly a new base technique to me.
This was the spice gravy,for madras,bhunas etc....

Now this REALLY blew me away.It was definitely base gravy,I watched him spoon it out of the big pot.It was very similar to my own base gravy I use(or rather the Little India base gravy.)However there was an incredible depth of BIR flavour and smell.The sort you get when you open a take-away bag.I compared it to my own gravy and there was no comparison.I've never made a gravy that has 'that' smell or taste.It's almost as if my gravy is not quite finished,as though there is something else that goes in it to finish it off.It got me back to thinking of Chris' magic paste,I've tried to dismiss that as just another bhager of some sort but now I'm forced to think again.This gravy was way out of my league,I just wish I knew what they'd put in it.It's great getting into kitchens but this made me realize that maybe my curries are missing that certain something.