and he claims a controversial ingredient, tomato ketchup
.
It's not controversial is it. The quantity he uses raised my eyebrow a bit though especially as he then adds tomato puree as well. Really it's just a cheat's way to sweeten the sauce without doing a long cook needed to bring the natural sweetness of the onions out, which is the proper way to do it.
Also, strangely, he makes a point of not using watered-down tomato puree because it's going to be added to a big pan of watery veg anyway, which is perfectly sensible. And yet he unnecessarily makes a stock at the beginning with carrots and onions, which are also in the main base, so totally unnecessary extra ingredients. He should just boil up the carcase on its own, maybe with the cinnamon, but that too could go in the main pot.
And, if I'm being really picky, he says he chops the onions because he only has a small stick blender so it makes it easier to blend than cooking the onions whole. In fact it's easier to cook them whole because they can then be blended by forcing them individually against the bottom of the pot with the blender. To be fair though, with the size of pot he's using, his little stick blender would probably be totally immersed doing it that way. But for the smaller pot used by the average home cook, whole onion cooking and blending is in fact the easier way I would argue.
Oh, and is anyone going to tell him that mL and grams are not the same thing?
I'm bored with bases though, haven't seen anything new in what must be 10 years now.
And Livo, talking about coriander roots, in general here in the UK coriander is quite hard to find with the roots still on so it definitely isn't a necessary ingredient for a base, although why he wouldn't use them is beyond me as they are not different enough in flavour to make an ounce of difference if he included them. Maybe he's just keeping them for something else where they are used fresh.