Kris Dhillon was my first BIR mentor, and her "Curry Secret" literally changed my life, but as time went by my confidence grew and eventually I started creating my own recipes and evolving my own methodology. Now, after several years of experimentation, I decided that it was time to go back to my roots and to re-create a basic Kris Dhillon dish (in this case, Chicken Madras), to see how it compared with my own recent offerings.
** Phil.
there is something about her book that draws me back
I feel the answer is within it's pages
I followed really closely her recipe for the gravy
everything weighed and cooked exactly for the right time
I then made a the chicken madras
It was a very good result
A little overpowered by the garam masala, but in all fairness,I've had bought curries like that
Worth noting is the temperature you cook the curry at
the boiling of the gravy is at a high temperature for 5 minutes
also the amount of oil for the curry
5 tablespoons
Seems a lot in the pan, but I did it
The spices didn't seem raw, using this method either
no garlic ginger fry either
and no tomato puree
you start the curry with a lot of gravy,
by the time you finish it's almost dried out
Clearly,there are many ways to cook a curry, because this was a good curry of a restaurant standard
Mind you, definitely not the best restaurant