method of bunging everything in cold and basically heating it up.
this method does work - i've tried it in the past (slowboat).
the real difference for me is that i'm now convinced i need to cook the soft spice dishes by this method (up to press i've used the same hot method for all).
i've also not given the pastes a real go.
after that i just don't know until i try the recipes (i bought the wrong tikka paste which has delayed me) - gut feeling is that there is unlikely to be step improvement. i certainly won't be changing how i cook the hard spice dishes for sure.
i have tried the biryani (rice part) so far and it was very good - converted me to it. i liked his bhajis too (close call with the IG version).
the real test for me will be the vindaloo as i was taken aback by how good CA's was. i think the madras is missing a paste (sauce). i still believe vindaloo is missing a paste too.
the other main area of interest for me is the proportions that Dipuraja uses - i expect this to produce some real good learning for me (seeing is believing so to speak).
a lot what he say's i can relate to fully - i'm just hoping in asking the why from what's not show in the video i can work out the gaps a little better than without them (these compliment maliks).