Well I have bought the fresh spices, garlic, ginger, coriander and tomatoes. I already have onions. I'll give it another go and see if I can't emulate the Balti bliss.
Brand new fresh cassia bark, green cardamom and kasoori methi and star anise (not pictured). My tej pat is still relatively new. Everything else required is good and I will lightly roast and grind my own fresh cumin and coriander seeds to ensure optimum flavour.
I have also bought several chicken breasts and it is my intention to do a side by side with raw chicken (as described) and a pre-cooked (probably Misty Ricardo or Syed). I also bought 2 butterflied legs of lamb so I'll be pre-cooking some of that to try a lamb dish. I will be doing small dishes to avoid wastage of expensive food.
Stay tuned I guess. It will be tomorrow as I'm eating Sri Lankan Fish Curry (Meen Kulambu) tonight.
Edit: Before I go ahead and make a new batch of gravy, I'm going to use up the last portion of the first attempt, and I'm going to follow the instructions for the preparation of the dish. I've just noticed again this:
To make balti:
No need for additional ground spices or extra salt!
and it started me thinking.
Reading back over the whole recipe and instruction again I notice that there is just 1 tsp of salt in the whole preparation. Assuming that the onion, carrots and capsicum will cook down to half raw volume and allowing for some evaporation loss, this whole base gravy should end up being around 2.5 to 3 litres litres in finished volume (there is a note to add additional water to achieve desired consistency). I made a half batch first up which gave me about 1.4 litres so that's about right. I've already made 4 dishes and there is enough for another.
I only used 1/2 tsp of salt, ie; 2.5g so each dish contains only 0.5 g of salt or 1/10 tsp. Hmmmm??? Would that go part way to answering the question Santa?