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Guy's,Can I suggest that, first off, we use the Taz base and the Taz mix, using the Taz method, then, we could use the same ingredients to do the, fry off method and see what the major differences are, if any?I know from experience, that if you fry off the garlic, ginger, spices tom puree (in that order) before any base goes in, you DO end up with a very oily curry. It's no problem for me because I love to spoon off the excess and use for my next curry but I would say that using the fry method, really intensifies the tomato flavour, perhaps a little too much!Whaddya think?Ray
Hi Ray,...snip...How about Chewy's recently posted madras recipe:http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=5376.0
I've no idea what temps spices cook at but I would suggest, not very high for not very long.
I also think how we heat spices makes a difference too! Simply boiling them doesn't work (unless they're whole spices of course) the ground spices tend not to dissolve and leave a gritty texture.
However, boiling them in a base sauce that contains about 3 tbsp of oil per 300ml of base, as the Taz base does, works fine.
a) We use the whole spices as the spec recipeb) We measure out the whole spices as the spec recipe, roast, then grind to powderc) We measure out the whole spices as the spec recipe and grind without roastingd) We just use packet, ground spices
My problem with d) is, will 1 tbs of whole coriander produce 1 tbs of gound coriander? Until we know what equates from turning whole spoces in to ground spices, we may not add the correct amounts.
I would conjecture in advance that I am unlikely to get much more than 0,6 teaspoons ground coriander from 1 teaspoon seeds