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I numbered the spices 1,2,3,4, giving their name and in English, how simple do you want it Phil
They use Cinnamon/Cassia Bark. either will do
Hi Phil, here's one http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=3923.0, coming from a brilliant bir observation, this has always puzzled me in comparison to almost every other recipe. Think the idea was to add the spices in the form of the onion paste, that has no mix powder either . Base uses "curry powder", which is the only powder mix i can see thereMy efforts at these are way off what you would be served in one of their restaurants
I think chewy was meaning 1234 (instead of renaming tham again) as in his post as follows, hope this helps.
These are the main 4 Garam spices preferred by Bengalis, plenty of other spices are used in there cooking but these 4 are fundamental and always have been. for Bengalis Anyhoo.
I would buy green cardamom, cassia bark, cloves and powdered mace, if you haven't already. Make the garam masala out of these, it will be very pungent, but you only need a little. Don't roast these, there is no point, they don't change flavour (unlike coriander, cumin and fenugreek), you only lose flavour!Add the garam masala (homemade) at the beginning, even with the onions, as the oil/ghee will extract the flavours. I would not add any at the end, but you might adjust the ratio of the individual spices in your original mix, as on prolonged cooking (say above 1 hour) some of the more volatile flavours will be lost to your kitchen atmosphere.Think of it like a perfume. They have three layers of fragrance (in classical perfumery anyway), top notes, middle notes and base notes. The green cardamom would be in the top notes, and lost most readily, then the cloves would be in the middle notes, and cassia in the base notes, and persist the longest. Its not scientific, but it seems to have merit. Not sure about the mace though?Other garam masalas can have other ingredients, I like brown cardamom, black cumin, cassia, cloves, mace and long pepper for N Indian dishes.
Ox1.Tej Patta aka Indian Bay LeavesNo confusion here or mistake, it is as stated.If you went into an Asian supermarket and asked for Indian Bay Leaves,they would give you Tej Patta, more than likely grown in Bangladesh and marketed as simply Bay Leaf. But if you asked for Cinnamomum tamala leaves or dried Malbathrum leaves or even simple Malabar LeavesI think they would struggle to know what you were talking about.GraemeThanks for helping the old chap across the road, very good of you ;DPhilI'll edit the post and go with Cassia Bark to avoid confusion for new members SPWhen I'm doing fresh powders, I usually judge the whole spice by eyegrind it in the Coffee Mill, then measure it by volume with a standard set of measuring spoons.I made this a couple of weeks ago with the 1,2,3,4, at 10ml + Black Pepper Corn 5ml + Mace 5ml + Black Salt 5mlthe Black Salt makes it more like a Chat Masala.I try to keep my fresh powders down to about 60gm to suit the small airtight containers I use.cheers Chewy