Login with username, password and session length
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Finally, if you are running a curry establishment you gotta have a tandoor. Most of his food will never get above average without one.
Quote from: chriswg on November 23, 2011, 10:44 AMFinally, if you are running a curry establishment you gotta have a tandoor. Most of his food will never get above average without one.I really have to disagree with that one, Chris. If he is offering curries, and not tandoori chicken, chicken tikka, seekh kebabs, etc., then what need has he of a tandoor ?** Phil.
Surely if he's offering some sort of curry menu it would utilize meat from a tandoori oven...there must be chicken tikka massala on the menu...
For myself, I still live in the 70s, mentally speaking : I like my curries as curries, and my tandoori/tikka as tandoori/tikka, and ne'er the twain shall meet ...** Phil.
[D]oes the base sound like the one in Dave Lloydon's undercover curry??? Slow cooking on a very low heat,18 key ingredients,cabbage,emulsion,spiced oil etc...
Quote from: jb on November 23, 2011, 11:39 AMSurely if he's offering some sort of curry menu it would utilize meat from a tandoori oven...there must be chicken tikka massala on the menu...It's age, Jb, it's age When I started eating BIR curry, no-one had even /thought/ of inventing Chicken Tikka Masala, and to find a tandoor was itself an exciting rarity (I ate regularly at the first restaurant in Birmingham to get one); now every tuppenny ha'penny take-away has its own tandoor, and if you can find a Chef's Special that /doesn't/ involve pre-tandoored chicken (or other pre-tandoored meat or fish), you are doing well indeed. For myself, I still live in the 70s, mentally speaking : I like my curries as curries, and my tandoori/tikka as tandoori/tikka, and ne'er the twain shall meet ...** Phil.