Now why couldn't you have just said "waterline"
Damn posh technical jargon..... ;D
Why yes, now that you mention it, that would be quite handy!
I'm ex-Royal Navy Ast ! (no jokes about sailors please).
Yeah, well... *and* your from *that* side of the Atlantic too.... Ok, so technically it's "this side" now that I live in Ireland, but I'd still never heard it called anything other than a waterline before.
When I get round to "trimming up" the "final" recipe I think the amount of water added to the veg will be a measured volume.
Probably a good idea. However, I was pleased that I managed to end up with almost exactly 4.6L--a number nice and easily divisible by 200ml! Not sure what it did to the taste though.
BTW, as far as I'm aware, tomato puree comes in three strengths (?), I wonder how much each of these strengths affects the final curry taste. Which did you use for your vindaloo?
Mine's Roma double concentrate in the tube. After getting tired of throwing out the small cans because I didn't use it for anything but the KD base, I figured it was a better solution. I honestly didn't pay attention to the strength when I bought it. Packaging was the primary selection criteria. Varying the amount is one of the things I want to play with since I'm not sure quite what it does to the final taste either.
Speaking of the final version, you did catch my note about the amount of salt and to identify the mass of the garlic and ginger puree, right? I know it was sorta buried in all that exposition...
I used the French Exquisa potatoes because that's all the shop had that were classified as salad potatoes. They're a little smaller than the Charlotte ones, so I probably could've used 2x as much without problem, but they seem to be about right in terms of solidity and lack of disintegration into unidentifiable mush. With all the potatoes we get over here, I'd be surprised if I can't get Charlottes now that I know what to look for.
Next time I do it, I think I'll leave out the carrot and see what happens to the taste. The single pepper diluted and cooked didn't seem to bother my wife, but the carrot would be pretty hard on my mother if I ever want to make it for her. She's never eaten much Indian food of any kind, and I'd hate to make her sick on the first go.
I think I'll try and find the right paprika too. Thanks for the reminder CQ.