I find it incredible that when someone comes forward to show you things it is met with a barrage.
Mikka,
For me at least, I judge his video on the end result, after all, that is the whole purpose. I appreciate that he is trying to keep the video length to a minimum and that in doing so, his process becomes shall we say 'ragged at the edges'.
However, the end result is not what I would call a 'perfect' onion bhaji. It appears in the video that the centre is not set in a batter as you would expect. I noted that one of his bhaji almost fell apart. This suggests that the mix was very loose or not cooked.
If I had been served a bhaji like this, I would most definitely have sent it back.
For these reasons, you have to question the integrity of the demonstration and the recipe. Personally, I would rather sit through 20 mins of slow drawn out video, if the end result was a clear understanding of the recipe, its process and the finished dish.
This is why you may feel that people have been objectionable, but I would not have called it a barrage.
The trouble is, as CA has pointed out previously, he doesn't help himself with his style of demonstration. I watched his demo on the Korma where he threw all the ingredients into a cold pan before heating it. He wouldn't cook like this for a paying customer, so why does he 'demonstrate' this on video?
Just a thought.
