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probably as with any dish, it’s better when cooked by a chef, no matter how talented the amateur.
If you go about cooking a whole curry dish and then right at the end throw in a bit of spice, you won't have a good dish. If you add the spice to frying onions, garlic, ginger etc, and cook it with oil, tomato and / or gravy, those flavours will create the curry to which you then add, or in which you then cook, the main ingredients. The difference will be chalk and cheese.
Quote from: livo on September 04, 2022, 03:27 AMIf you go about cooking a whole curry dish and then right at the end throw in a bit of spice, you won't have a good dish. If you add the spice to frying onions, garlic, ginger etc, and cook it with oil, tomato and / or gravy, those flavours will create the curry to which you then add, or in which you then cook, the main ingredients. The difference will be chalk and cheese.What about the balti paste recipe (link) you posted recently? I thought you said it's good for improving a dish lacking in flavour. Don't you add it at the end, a bit like garam masala? If so, the paste will end up semi-raw. Thank you for the paste link, by the way. I thought it looked good and it's something else I intend to try.