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can anyone tell me how I go about making up larger batches, ie. if I am following a recipe for 2 and I want to make 100 portions do I just multiply by 50?
Hi FrancineWelcome to the forum.There is no way you can cook a BIR style curry for 100 people in one hit using any of the BIR recipes on this forum (if that is your question).As George implied (I think), you will need to replicate what you are doing now (curry for two), 50 times. Add each completed curry into a very large pot or freeze in large batches. You would then reheat when required. You may even be able to cook a curry for four in one hit (multiply ingredients by four), and repeat 25 times but I doubt cooking this quantity in one pan will give the same results as cooking a single or double portion.RegardsSnS ;D
As George implied (I think), you will need to replicate what you are doing now (curry for two), 50 times
I thought George was implying something different; that you just scale everything up by 50. Which korma and madras recipes did you use?
Sorry George, as much as I normally respect and agree with your opinion, on this occasion I have to disagee with you (a little). A BIR curry is not cooked or despatched in quanities much above two portions. Heat and maintaining of, is - in my opinion - essential to the cooking process, albeit somewhat a hit or miss process, domestically. There is no way that a domestic burner is high enough in power output to cater for more than 4 servings cooked in the BIR fashion. I suppose this goes back to another thread about what temperature spices should be cooked at ........... or not?
I can't be sure, of course, because I've never tried cooking industrial scale quantities to feed 100 people. I would expect the main challenge to be logistics, purely in terms of the volumes involved. Schools and other institutions cook large quantities, so it's nothing new.
Base sauce - no problem, surely. BIRs prepare large volumes. Indeed some people say smaller volumes 'don't work'. Cook in 1, 2 or 3 batches.
Pilau rice - I don't see how this will be very difficult either. Again some/most BIRs prepare large volumes of pilau rice in advance and only reheat it later in smaller portion sizes. If a table of 8 all order pilau rice, there's no way they'll cook it 8 times!
Korma - I found that low heat works fine. High heat is neither necessary nor desirable, so I would expect high volumes of korma to turn out fine, as well.
Madras and similar dishes - the least certain outcome - since a high heat, stir fry type approach is normally used. I still reckon that batches of around 2.5 litres would be perfectly manageable (cooked in a larger pan) and 90% as good, if not 100% as good as a 0.5 litre normal-sized portion (cooked in a smaller pan), over the same domestic hob.
I also wonder what happens in a BIR if half, say, my table of 8 (above) all order the same dish - like CTM - and another 3 orders for the same dish (CTM) come in at the same time from another table. Total 7 portions of CTM required. Would they really cook it 7 times, one after the other? I find it difficult to believe.