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If a curry base is made too suit one particular curry recipe (eg: a madras) then it probably does lack versatility and should not be classified a BIR base gravy.
Thanks for you efforts Bobby - a fair test as far as I can see, but I get the feeling you're beating your head against the wall here.
Now, granted, if you want a tomatoey flavour then you are going to have to add some tomtoes to it arent you (which I think is secretsantas an domis point about not being able to mix bases and main recipes bobby, though i dont tend to agree totally with it)!
Maybe put them head to head with the saffron madras too then (or the rajver base and madras)? I think all youll be doing is proving secretsantas (and domis) point
I have no idea what you're trying to address here. Of course if you want it to taste more "tomatoey" you have to add tomato in some form. However, it makes a great Madras from the simple Madras recipe as is, and so obviously can be used with other recipes, although may not perform to it's optimum. However, in this case, we are not testing the optimum performace of the base - we are testing how well it can conform with a generic recipe.
Should we conclude from this (assuming that all or most are genuine BIR recipes), that there should be at least some tomato or tomato puree in the base recipe to fulfil the versatility requirement?