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Quote from: Clive77 on August 08, 2012, 11:17 AMWhen you say tomato paste, are we talking concentrate or straight tom paste.Hi Clive77,Double (or triple) concentrated tomato paste.
When you say tomato paste, are we talking concentrate or straight tom paste.
Here is my curry base that I currently use. It is the result of many years of me attempting to replicate BIR curries. I have tried countless other recipes, countless alternative ingredients, countless alternative methods, etc, but, until someone comes up with a major breakthrough (and I feel sure there must be one!), it is the best I can currently accomplish. It makes about 2.3 litres of curry base, which is sufficient for about 9 single portion curries.
This Base is awesome!!! ...did a Madra's with the same base and WOW WOW WOW It was perfect
I made a batch of this yesterday and tried it out on a Vindaloo...quite honestly it was blinkin' fabulous, the best curry I've EVER made (and I'm not just saying that...). This base is definitely better than the one I've been using. Despite being quite similar in it's constitution, it's the proportions that are just spot on
there was a distinct flavour of raw curry powder....the final curry had a definite aroma of raw curry powder....I was personally unhappy with the smell, which took me back (mentally) to the bad old days of British curries, when the average housewife would simply add raw curry powder to a casserole recipe and then serve it as a curry
Quote from: Phil (Chaa006)there was a distinct flavour of raw curry powder....the final curry had a definite aroma of raw curry powder....I was personally unhappy with the smell, which took me back (mentally) to the bad old days of British curries, when the average housewife would simply add raw curry powder to a casserole recipe and then serve it as a currySorry to hear that you were disappointed, Phil, and that your findings were so different from others' (again).I cannot really explain your findings. I don't really understand why you found "the distinct flavour (and smell) of raw curry powder". I've never found this. I've tried many, many, variations (including frying the spices) and have found this method to be the best (to preserve flavours, freshness, etc).
You are anyway frying the spices (and the curry base) when you subsequently prepare your final curries, aren't you? Or perhaps you're still adding spices to cold oil..... :-X
Thanks for trying it, and reporting your findings, anyway!
I am still unclear what exactly was your thinking behind (1) the inclusion of, and (2) the timing of the inclusion of (a) curry masala, and (b) curry powder in your base.....it is not at all clear to me why one would include curry masala and curry powder in a base and, if one is going to do so, why they are neither bhooned nor cooked for any appreciable time
]but I am not "frying" the base, nor do I see how one can "fry" a base. It is (gently) heated, and then added to the pre-fried chicken, garlic, ginger, chilli, oil, etc., but is it really possible to "fry" a substance (base) that is primarily an aqueous liquid with suspended vegetable matter and spices ?
In reality what you are doing is braising the spices (and the other suspended ingredients, and the meat); in a KD-style curry, that is indeed what you do (the spices are never fried at all)
but the main difference as far as I can see is that KD eschews curry powder and you include it