Another way to ask this beginners question in the beginners section is:
How is a "Real Balti" different from any other style?
(and I don't mean the Wikipedia definition, ie:
"A Balti (Balti:
?, Urdu:
??) is a type of curry served in a thin, pressed steel wok-like "balti bowl".[1] It is served in many restaurants in the United Kingdom. The consensus appears to be that the term refers to the pot in which the curry is cooked,[2][unreliable source?] rather than to any specific ingredient or cooking technique, although it is stated that it is cooked until the cooking liquid has largely evaporated. [3]")
Quote from Bengali Bob Oct 2 2013. Three Baltis
"
The main thing that is throwing me somewhat at the moment is that the Kushi base, spice mix and pre-cooks are, I feel, essentially very much like what (in the right hands) can be used to make typical high-quality "BIR faire", whereas the actual dishes from the Kushi are (in my experience) high-quality "Birmingham balti". Both highly desirable food stuffs, yet markedly different in nature."This is on p 11/38. Waters still muddy for me but I intend to read the whole thread this morning and some of the links contained therein.
Curryhell from p 6
"
Maybe one day, i'll get back to Brum and get to try a real balti. I sure as hell am not going to get anything close down my neck of the woods, albeit served in the right dish and called a balti
.
Good luck to those on the balti quest."fried from p15
"
I've heard people talk in hushed whispers about the Birmingham Baltis but unfortunatly missed the boat on that. I find it hard to understand the exact difference in taste between Balti and standard BIR."jerry p16
"
across most of BIR land there is no difference between Balti and BIR dishes."
So I've read the 38 pages and it would appear that Jerry has provided the closest thing to a method / ingredient list to a Balti, as far as a couple of people are concerned anyway. I see very little difference in ingredients to other curries and the method is about low heat / quick fry as opposed to high heat / singeing.
Stock, soy, tomato powder, rose petals, pandan, ajwain (which is not lovage), secret GM's, oil or ghee, pre-cooked meat or fresh. All still not answered definitively. What makes a balti a balti?