Author Topic: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?  (Read 10020 times)

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Offline ast

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #10 on: January 08, 2008, 01:55 PM »
From the place that makes the vindaloo that I like the best, if the best chef does it, it always includes extremely small, sliced green chillies which, on their own, are fairly hot--milder than  habaneros, for example.  Again, not sure if he was winding me up, but after a few go-rounds about getting my vindaloo hot enough, he said that to make my vindaloo, he'd order the chillies from Bangladore instead of the ones they normally used.  Dunno if he did or not, but not long after that, the vindaloo got a lot hotter and a lot better.

The guys I was talking to at the place in London mentioned one of their two chefs didn't like to cook phals due to the fumes from the chilli powder, so he didn't cook them properly and just chucked a bunch extra in so it was ungodly hot, but not very good.  They said I was lucky the night I was there because I got the better chef that actually prepared it correctly.

Don't know how this compares to other places, though.

Offline brum_57

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #11 on: January 12, 2008, 12:32 AM »
being as I only make hot curries ranging from madras to phall - I allways load the base gravy with extra hot chilli powder and cook it long and slow to cook out the harshness of the powder - not BIR technique I know but it works for me :P

Kev.

p/s recipe to follow - using a slow cooker -  great for cooking base gravy (IMO)
« Last Edit: January 12, 2008, 12:55 AM by brum_57 »

Offline Curry King

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #12 on: January 15, 2008, 01:43 PM »
I've never been keen on to much chili powder but like a hot one so tend to use scotch bonnet chili's.  I find if I chop them up to a pulp and add them at the very start of cooking the heat comes through without the taste.

Offline Jethro

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #13 on: January 15, 2008, 05:57 PM »
I've never been keen on to much chili powder but like a hot one so tend to use scotch bonnet chili's.  I find if I chop them up to a pulp and add them at the very start of cooking the heat comes through without the taste.


I did an interesting experiment with the last curry night I did. There were 6 of us eating and 2 of the guests can eat a medium curry, 3 like it hot and one is an absolute chilli head.
I did a vast amount of Dhansak and split into 2 about halfway through the final cook up.
The first portion was based entirely on chilli and chilli powder in the original recipe, which gives a nice medium curry.
The second portion had 4 haba?ero chillies finely chopped and thrown in and mixed.
This portion was then split again and 3 Dorset Nagas to the final portion.
All 3 lots were then cooked off and served.

Result:
Portion 1, just chilli powder and original chilles from recipe = nice medium/hot well rounded dark full flavour (as it should be)

Portion 2, Original chilli content plus 4 haba?ero chillies = still nice round flavour but hotter and flavour was slightly lifted with more top notes.

Portion3, All the chilli content of the other 2 with 3 Dorset Nagas as well= Much lighter flavour, and *expletive deleted* hot.

Conclusion:
The addition of fresh chillies seems to lift the curry (more lighter top note flavours)
BUT whether this is due to the inherent flavour of the chillies added, or the gob numbing abilities of vast quantities of capsaicin, I am not sure..discuss and experiment for yourselves. :)


Offline ast

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #14 on: January 15, 2008, 07:35 PM »
Result:
Portion 1, just chilli powder and original chilles from recipe = nice medium/hot well rounded dark full flavour (as it should be)

Portion 2, Original chilli content plus 4 haba?ero chillies = still nice round flavour but hotter and flavour was slightly lifted with more top notes.

Portion3, All the chilli content of the other 2 with 3 Dorset Nagas as well= Much lighter flavour, and *expletive deleted* hot.

Conclusion:
The addition of fresh chillies seems to lift the curry (more lighter top note flavours)
BUT whether this is due to the inherent flavour of the chillies added, or the gob numbing abilities of vast quantities of capsaicin, I am not sure..discuss and experiment for yourselves. :)

Holy crap!  And people were accusing me of making my curries hot! :o

Just so I can compare, approximately what was the volume of sauce/chillies in each case?  I use habaneros from time to time (and I'm currently drying some to use to make some custom chilli powder), but I've never had Scotch Bonnets or Dorset Naga.  From the Peppers by Post site, it looks quite interesting.

I quit eating really spicy food on a regular basis for a while after we moved out of the city, and I noticed my tolerance isn't what it used to be.  With all these curries here lately though, I'm working on getting back in shape. :)

Still, I don't know that I'd be able to eat your curries.  Those Dorset Nagas look pretty serious!

Offline Secret Santa

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #15 on: January 15, 2008, 08:30 PM »
...(more lighter top note flavours)

Oh get her! (unless you are a her of course in which case the joke doesn't work so well. :) )

Offline Jethro

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #16 on: January 15, 2008, 09:27 PM »
...(more lighter top note flavours)

Oh get her! (unless you are a her of course in which case the joke doesn't work so well. :) )

SS,
very sorry with coming out with phrases you may not have heard before, but they come second nature to anyone who has had 30 years working in the food industry and knows anything about taste testing descriptions/techniques.
If you have got a better description for defining the difference between types of flavours then please let us all know.
Perhaps you could re-define the whole way the food industry works, tests, describes the way we taste things, and pass the information on to others in a way they might understand and therefore have the vocabulary to describe what they are actally tasting in a logical way.

Offline Secret Santa

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #17 on: January 16, 2008, 03:41 AM »
Hi Jethro

I've had nigh on 30 years trying to emulate BIR curries and still haven't managed it. BTW you may have missed the smiley at the end of my post (not to mention the fact that I said it was a joke), makes all the difference to what I said. No?

But I forgive you.  (Is there a saint smiley?)

Offline curryqueen

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #18 on: January 16, 2008, 07:32 PM »
I have been cooking curries the restaurant way for well over 20 year now and in my opinion the use of fresh green chilles and chilli powder are used when making vindaloo/phalls, the hot ones.  If you use too much chilli powder, all it does is make the curry too powdery and thick and stodgey as the chilli powder would also act as a thickening agent too.  By using some chilli powder and hot fresh chillies chopped you don't get that powdery taste and the flavours still come through. CQ







Offline ast

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Re: How Do BIRs Make Their Curries Hot?
« Reply #19 on: January 16, 2008, 08:27 PM »
On the next-to-last lot of vindaloo I made, I used 4tsp of hot chilli powder and 1.5 tsp of cayenne (it was supposed to be 2, but I ran out) for 200ml of base.  I agree with CQ that if you add much more than that in terms of volume with other spices, you're throwing off the consistency and you're going to need to add some extra liquid of some kind.

I still think the best taste combination is quite a bit of hot, some cayenne and some fresh chillies to give the full depth of heat before, during and after each bite.  I have to experiment with a few more kinds of chillies though, because I don't quite have the right ones for the taste I want.  I've exhausted the range available at the local shop, so I've got to schedule a shopping trip to a proper Indian/Asian market to see what I can find there.

CQ, what kind of fresh green chillies are you talking about?  Are they fairly small?

 

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