Since I'm working at home today and few people are back, I decided that I'd have a go using some of what I've learned from the forum to make a Chicken Vindaloo for lunch. I'm happy to say, that I think it's all down to technique, because I think it was every bit as good as BIR curries I've had from my favorite restaurant. I also have that same "heavy" feeling after eating it that I have with "real" BIR, so something must've gone right.
Most of what I did was influenced heavily by the cooking techniques described by Gary (parker21) in this post:
http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=2041.0.
However, I only used it as a guide as to techniques, and adapted some things as well. Here's the run-down of what I did:
I started with some of the remaining Stage 3 KD base I described in this post:
http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=2246.0 and half of the remaining cooked chicken. I set aside about 500ml of the base.
I then put about 3 tablespoons of oil in a 1/4 cup measure and added 1/4 tsp of dry minced garlic to it (I used all of the fresh we had the other day). I let this sit awhile, so that the granules would absorb some of the oil, but it was also so I could get the rest of the stuff organized.
I then decided I'd use the spices from the KD curry recipe, so I made a spice mix of:
- 1 tsp salt
- 6 tsp hot chilli powder
- 1 tsp garam masala (heaped)
- 1/2 tsp ground cumin (heaped)

Dry Spice Mix
I'd originally decided I'd follow Gary's method to fry the dried spices, but then I knew I wanted to add some of the remaining fresh chillies I had. I looked at my notes from Gary's post and decided that it would make sense to cook the chillies in with the dry spices, so then I decided I'd add them to the spice mix. Having mixed it and coated the chopped chillies, I got to looking at the process again and said, "Why not make a paste instead?"
Again, based on Gary's method ("1/4 ladle of runny base sauce(200ml ladle)"), I poured 50ml of base into the dry spice mix and made a paste.

Vindaloo Paste Mixture
Once this was ready, I started to actually prepare the vindaloo. I heated the empty pan on med-high heat until it felt like it was ready (not sure how else to put this). I dumped in the oil and garlic and quickly swirled it around the pan, roasting the garlic granules and making sure they didn't burn. Not sure if it was 30s or not.
I then added the paste to the hot pan (not removing it from the heat) and quickly stirred it around to fry the paste. I'd say it was about a minute.

Frying the Paste Mixture
After that, I dumped in the remainder of the base sauce and boiled gently (reduced the heat to around medium), stirring constantly (mostly to reduce the splatter) for about 3 minutes to reduce it to close to my desired consistency.

After First Reduction
I then added the chicken and continued to stir occasionally for about 3 minutes.

Finished Vindaloo (in the pan)
Served over a fresh batch of my pilau rice (
http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=2233.0) and garnished with a few of the chopped chillies and a few sprinkles of dried coriander leaf (but without the Cobra beer this time).


Finished Vindaloo (presented)
Based on it being
exactly the same base, and exactly the same spices but yielding vastly superior results than my New Year's Day efforts, I don't see how there's a "secret" ingredient missing from any of the bases people are using on this forum. It all comes down to the technique used in making the curries.
Of course, the big question is: can I actually do it again???

All-in-all, I'd say it was a fairly mild/moderate vindaloo (what you'd get here around the 3rd time you asked for a really hot vindaloo at the same restaurant in as many weeks so they didn't forget you). Next time I think I'll try 8 tsp of chilli powder instead, or add more fresh chillies. I don't think the paste could handle more than most of two chopped fresh chillies though. Each of these was about 4" long. I'm not sure how the consistency of the paste would be with the additional chilli powder either. I guess it's just a feel thing so that it turns out the right consistency.
Hope this helps someone.
Cheers,
ast
BTW, still frustrated with the pictures, but at least these are better. It's a little tricky to take pictures and cook at the same time without messing either of them up, don't you think? I guess this just takes practice too--or an assistant.
