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Hi PaulP, easy to prepare hey, thats always nice to hear! whats the basic madras or dopiaiza like? does it really taste like a real TA? If not , whats missing? Korma is not a good way to assess a base in my opinion. did you make a madras or dopiaza? was it top notch?
Hi CA I agree the base is bland but would argue that maybe a base should be a little bland?
That bottle looks like something from a chemistry set!
I'm not sure anybody here has achieved that yet. I do think they are a welcome inclusion to cr0 and shouldn't be lightly overlooked
Quote from: Derek Dansak on January 12, 2010, 01:24 PMHi PaulP, easy to prepare hey, thats always nice to hear! whats the basic madras or dopiaiza like? does it really taste like a real TA? If not , whats missing? Korma is not a good way to assess a base in my opinion. did you make a madras or dopiaza? was it top notch? But it produces simple, decent tasting BIR curries, nevertheless.I think many members would be happy to consider this as their personal end point.
This looks like a very interesting new line of enquiry ! however i am so dam close with the methods i already know
Yes, perhaps. But I STILL think all of our bases are missing something......
Hi DD, I agree about the Korma not being a good test. Normally I make savoury madras type curries sometimes adding peppers and opions, sometimes not.
I would have thought many members dont want 100 ways to produce a "not quite right" version of a TA.
CA - have you tried this method with your base and/or spice mix? Curious to know how that turns out
I've used this technique to make a dopiaza (as specified) and a madras (me ad libbing). I used the base and spice mix and technique as specified. I thought the base was OK but a little bland.I thought the spice mix was much like Bruce Edward's and was OK (but nothing special)