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ChewyDo you have the recipe to make the GM powder with the famous four.Les
Quote from: Les on January 16, 2012, 04:22 PMChewyDo you have the recipe to make the GM powder with the famous four.LesHi LesJust equal parts, near enough No need to roast or you can if you fancy1part Cardamom Seeds (Discard Husks)1part Cloves 1part Tej Patta 1part Cinnamon Stick.cheers Chewy
Quote from: Phil (Chaa006) on January 16, 2012, 01:28 PMSo what really is unclear ? We know what it contains (in general, and to a certain extent, specific, terms), we know how it is used. What remains to be discussed ?For me personally, (I can't speak for others) specifically how a BIR Chef would use his/her Garam Masala mix. That's really what I would like to know. Are they using it as an ingredient in a generic 'spice mix'? Or as a replacement for the 'spice mix' itself? Or along more conventional lines aka Julian from C2Go, as an addition at the end of cooking? [...] Maybe it's just me, but I'm quite curious about understanding this.
So what really is unclear ? We know what it contains (in general, and to a certain extent, specific, terms), we know how it is used. What remains to be discussed ?
Just equal parts, near enough No need to roast or you can if you fancy1part Cardamom Seeds (Discard Husks)1part Cloves 1part Tej Patta 1part Cinnamon Stick.
Confused, Chewy : in your earlier message you wrote : "The same whole Garam spices, 1234 when ground and combined, produce a Garam Masala Powder"; I took your "1234" as indicating the proportions, but you now say these are 1:1:1:1. If "1234" were not the proportions, what were they intended to represent ?Also can you clarify further your use of "Darchini or Cinnamon/Cassia Bark" ? For me, "Dalchini" (my preferred spelling, but we are both referring to the same thing) is Cinnamon. Cassia bark is another substance completely, which I refer to in my own posts as "faux Cinnamon" but which is also called (e.g.,) "Chinese cinnamon". From your perspective, which is used in Garam Masala : Cinnamon, or Cassia Bark [2] ?** Phil.--------[1] from Cinnamomum verum[2] from Cinnamomum aromaticumC. burmannii (Korintje or Indonesian cinnamon) and C. loureiroi (Saigon cinnamon or Vietnamese cinnamon) are also sources of variants of faux Cinnamon.
Yes, I think that question is a very important one, but would you not agree that we can almost certainly rule out the possibility of a knowledgeable BIR chef "using [GM] as a replacement for the 'spice mix' itself" ? I would estimate the probability of that at nearly zero.** Phil.