So was it the synergy of all the ingredients that resulted in this serendipitous outcome or do you attribute it to a particular ingredient? The kala namak seems to stand out as not typically BIR.
It
[kala namak] is something to which I have become somewhat addicted, having discovered only very recently just how different it is to Himalayan pink salt, As to synergy/serendepity, a little of both I feel, since I tried exactly the same with a chicken leg (chopped through the bone) and although it was perfectly edible it lacked a certain
je ne sais quoi. It (the chicken curry, that is) certainly picked up when I added some onion salad (which I had also eaten yesterday, albeit with a little tomato which I didn't have today) but while the lamb was 100% pure BIR heaven, the chicken was sadly only 85%.
This sounds interesting. I see you found some kala namak (black salt) and it would seem to provide the taste you wanted? How was the lamb pre cooked?
Not entirely sure. I took it from the freezer, and all that my label said was "Currying lamb, pre-cooked". Almost certainly bhunaoed in a Mehran masala, but which one I can no longer be sure (probably "fry/karahi mutton masala"), then basically made into a curry using normal techniques and cooked until soft. That may well explain the difference with today's chicken, which I defrosted in the microwave oven at 10% for 95 minutes immersed in 350ml KD1 base which I then used to make the curry.
The 2 mirch powders you've used are yet another source of frustration and amusement, [...]
I use only the MDH brand of these, and with MDH I can be confident that the Kashmiri is primarily for colour whilst the Degghi is for heat ...
** Phil.