@ Jeera
Will be needing some mix powder shortly so will make up Az's with his own garam masala. Providing the singeing bit is done correctly i would expect the results to be good.
@ELW.
I totally agree. The smell and the taste are made during those first crucial couple of minutes. Get it wrong then and you end up with a homemade curry. LIKE I JUST HAVE

However, i little wiser that i was, there are learings from this. I did make the mistake of introducing the spice to the pan and singeing it without the tomato paste. Of course when i realised i was straight in with the paste and a very quick stir and in with the gravy. I went in to panic mode when i realised that i'd omitted the paste with the spice mix and chilli powder

.
The singeing of the spice was fine. It wasn't burnt. If i'd have left it a fraction longer, it would have been. What i failed to do was add the tomato paste and complete the singeing before adding the gravy to fuse everything. I think ELW said a fusion takes place between the spice, paste and the gravy. From this comes not only the smell but the taste. I couldn't agree more. Without that fusion at temperature the ingredients in the pan remain individuals and do not become that "whole" that creates the BIR experience we all crave. I know understand why Az's vindaloo will produce a different flavour from the phall. The spice is singed creating a flavour and then signed further with the paste therefore changing the flavour before being fused with the gravy to create the flavour that will dominate the finished dish, excluding additonal flavour additives. This certainly has given me something to think about. First time my kitchen hasn't smelt like a BIR since last Sunday week

. But i'll be wiser the next time i fire up the cooker ;D Glad your singeing is going well ELW

EDIT - I forgot to mention how i knew i'd singed the chilli correctly and not burnt it. I did the add water bit and test the heat of the sauce. I only added 3/4 level chef's spoon and WOW, was that hot or what

. Hotter than when i cooked the phall and it was only ordinary chilli powder

And no burnt taste which would have been very obvious

I am already looking forward to the next singeing session :
