Hi everyone,
Re: The New Curry Secret
Apologies for the tardy response. I have read your comments and hear what you say. I don?t really now where to start, but perhaps I can start by saying that I don?t believe I would be giving my readers value for money by simply re-hashing the recipes I put in The Curry Secret 20 years ago. I know they are still firm favourites but everyone already has them and how many different ways can you cook a Chicken Tikka Masala or a Bhuna and still make it interesting enough to write about it and expect people to pay for it?
I think the suggestion that the new book might have had ?Modern Indian? in the name is probably right on the mark. I spent some considerable time looking at Indian restaurant menus from London to Scotland but also in other cities around the world and many of the new recipes are indeed served in these restaurants. In the new book I?ve aimed to provide the know-how to cook dishes that are enjoyed in Indian restaurants in many parts of the world and not just in Britain. Many others are my own creations or dishes based on traditional recipes, but prepared using restaurant cooking styles and techniques adapted to cooking easily at home.
Does a dish have to be served in an Indian restaurant to qualify as an ?Indian restaurant curry?? I think not. It simply has to be prepared using restaurant methods and have that ?restaurant? curry taste and texture. And whilst you may not see some of the dishes in The New Curry Secret on your local restaurant menu, they are in the restaurant style and more importantly they are absolutely delicious. So rather than taking something away by not repeating the usual, well known, tried and tested BIR dishes, I aimed to add something that was not there before and give readers the ability to create different restaurant style dishes in their own kitchens.
I?ve changed the method of cooking the base sauce in response to e-mails from hundreds of readers that the original recipe ?smelled the house out?. Having done so, I think this way produces a nicer result and I have had some feed back that others agree but you need to try it and see if you feel the same. It?s all about options and this is another one for the base sauce.
At the risk of stating the obvious, you can?t be all things to all people. A recipe that one person loves and raves about another finds ordinary and dull. But if that recipe gives the latter the impetus and inspiration to create something they were not able to create before, then it is still a success. That?s what The Curry Secret did 20 years ago and in different ways I hope The New Curry Secret will do the same. Whether you add more of this and less of that is a matter of personal taste.
Finally, I?ve said it in the book but I?ll say it again any how ? you can?t create a silk purse out of a sow?s ear. No amount of sugar and spice will disguise poor tasting ingredients. If you use fresh, organic or locally grown produce and good quality meats and oils you will cook wonderful food, whether it?s on the restaurant menu or not.
Happy cooking,
Kris Dhillon