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Quote from: smokenspices on March 11, 2008, 03:14 PMShould 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?This would seem to be the case. It seems fairly obvious to me that most currys contain tomatoes in some form. In which case, it would save the BIR time to try and accommodate this in the base sauce, rather than having to add ingredients to each curry at the final stage.I can understand the use of Tomato Puree at the final stage, as it helps with consistency and cooking the spices without burning them and also contributes to producing the BIR "toffee" smell.I cannot however understand the use of Pasatta in the final stage dish. It would cool the pan down too much and waste cooking time. It's also more expensive than tinned tomatoes in my local supermarket. Finally, I never heard, from the many first hand BIR kitchen encounters on this site, of the use of Pasatta in curry cooking.Taking this into account, coupled with the fact that we know that most curries contain a fresh / tinned tomato element, I have to conclude, as SnS suggests, the tomatoes must be added at the base sauce stage.
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?
A white sauce quickly becomes a mustard sauce, cheese sauce parsley sauce at the inclusion of one or two ingredients all of which dramatically change the final sauce...You wouldn't use parsley sauce in a lasagne....and there, I think, I rest my case ;D
i was particularly interested in the addition of celery (which i don't care for) and was interested on any thoughts you have on the addition of celery.
I think the problem here is actually defining what a BIR curry base should be and what we expect from it (again). :
Yes Domi, but we're making curry from the base sauce, which will always contain tomato.
Darth's base doesn't, so is it not reasonable to suggest that this was not, perhaps a fair test?
Quote from: Domi on March 11, 2008, 05:42 PMDarth's base doesn't, so is it not reasonable to suggest that this was not, perhaps a fair test? If Darths base does not contain tomatoes then it does not contain tomatoes. This does mean that I or anyone else should give it some special consideration while following generic recipes.