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Hi Mikka - one thing I like about this forum is that people here are prepared to experiment! I've just partially ruined a 3 litre base by grinding the seeds separately instead of boiling the whole seeds then blending. I thought Pakistani chef Taz must have a reason for specifying whole seeds in his recipe and now I think I know why.I think it's entirely true to say the BIR style of cooking as you described is first and foremost to produce the fastest possible curries. From the videos I've seen they can cook 2 dishes at once and can probably turn out 2 dishes in 8-10 minutes. Personally I don't think they do this to make the food taste better than a slower cooked dish.The fact remains though that nearly everybody on this forum can't quite match the taste of their favourite takeaways, cooked with that method. Also a lot of myths even in Indian cookery probably still prevail. I was dismayed to read in my new "50 great curries of India" cookbook that if you make your dish too salty stick a potato in it! We all know that doesn't work dont we?
speed isn't the essence it is the spice/method.
CA's post on the smokiness will show u the how though.
:Ok so where is that? ;D
Don't worry about it Mikka, you just wouldn't be convinced...at all!
I see that you only trust yourself.
Nooooooo, I trust you too Mikka...trust me!