Well things didn't go exactly to plan, but there's nothing new about that at my place. I'd forgotten that Mrs L is on a special diet for the next 2 weeks, leading up to a medical examination. No Grain, no seeds and next week no dairy either. Essentially, no food that I can easily prepare. I love her anyway. Nevertheless, I did the best I could and made her a Balti Vegetables and Balti Chicken and Mushroom (using Passata instead of Tomatoes with seeds and skin). I only had ingredients left to prepare myself a Balti Chicken and I decided to go the Base Gravy method as I've already tried the fresh method.
Dinner was delicious and I have to admit that I like Birmingham Balti, assuming I'm cooking it as it's meant to be. There are a few observations though.
1) Neither of Shababs Baltis are anything like MDB's Balti Chicken. Secret Santa, you'll be pleased to know that these dishes are full of flavour and spice.
2) Balti is a flavour!!! Take the word of Mrs L. Her comment was, and I quote, "They all taste the same". So if I'm doing Misty Ricardo's Balti (Shababs) Base Gravy correctly, or the cook from scratch method, and then using that to cook different dishes with different principle ingredients, and they all taste the same, then we can assume that this is the Balti flavour. In light of the way a Balti House served food, this is not really surprising. If you went in and ordered a Balti Chicken or a Balti Prawn it is only the chicken or prawn that varies.
3) As a versatile Base Gravy (100% Balti clone or not) I prefer MDB's. The flavour profile in the Shababs (Misty Ricardo) gravy is way too strong to be anything that can be manipulated to other dishes. It is really good but it is the curry. I could make delicate Butter Chicken out of MDB's gravy, but I doubt it will work with the Shababs gravy. The big flavour is Black Cardamom so I suppose you could drop that back a little.
4) I actually prefer the Shababs cook from scratch over the base gravy method. There is probably a qualifier required here. I feel that in this instance, cooking a reduced quantity with strong spices (cloves, black cardy's etc) is something that needs fine tuning. I only cooked 2/3 of the recipe quantity (linear scaling). In saying that though, I really see potential in this gravy. Very tasty indeed.
So, all in all, I believe I'm cooking Birmingham Baltis, but having never tasted one, maybe I'm not. Either way it isn't Patak's Balti Paste, and this time, not even my own. All cooked exactly how it's meant to be.
Sad thing is I had to have Chickpea roti again instead of big fluffy naan.
