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Julien from c2go mentioned 'caramelising' the cooked base in the pan, almost burning it to produce a flavour, which is a term i'v never heard on here regarding the pureed base. could he have been meaning the reduction of the 1st ladle?
I believe the best tools are the bare aluminium pan and the steel serving spoon, like most BIR chefs use.
I've known about the "caramelisation theory" as I'm sure others have on here probably since I cooked using the Taz base and method. The method utilises a particularly oily base that is reduced hard and fast while all the time it is continually scraped off the pan sides and bottom and remixed back in with the more runny sauce. This method definitely produces a sweet smokey taste.
You are correct it is an important observation (caramelisation of base) but I suspect a lot of cooks achieve the effect without thinking about it just by watching loads of BIR videos and copying the technique as best they can.
A silly question perhaps....but....where exactly does Julian mention the technique of 'caramelising' the base in the pan.I've watched his videos with great interest but I must have overlooked that.In his vindaloo video he talks about almost 'burning' the ingredients in his pan but that's BEFORE any base sauce is added,I guess it's in another video??
It's patently obvious I think that this Julian chap knows what he's doing
Quote from: jb on December 22, 2011, 09:40 AMA silly question perhaps....but....where exactly does Julian mention the technique of 'caramelising' the base in the pan.I've watched his videos with great interest but I must have overlooked that.In his vindaloo video he talks about almost 'burning' the ingredients in his pan but that's BEFORE any base sauce is added,I guess it's in another video??Hi JbIts in his video entitled "the curry pan", it actually makes a bit of sense that video as well imo Wayne
You won't get caramelisaton by just boiling - the blended onions have to touch the hot metal pan.
You stated that so few seem to understand the difference between caramelisation and reduction but the only evidence you have for this is a lack of response on this thread?.
As I implied you don't need to know the science, you just need to do it correctly. Try watching chewytikka cooking his madras on the video - he knows the technique.