I could blunt my senses in a kitchen all day long, but a side by side comparison will always show a difference between bir@home & bir in itself. Doing a spot the difference between homestyle & bir & I see heat/base gravy/ & initial cooking technique. After that it cooks away like anything else, the bir bit is done! I would like to know this however.
Do Asian cooks/families, use this initial hot cooking technique at home? & if not why not?
Can anyone reproduce the slightly burned taste by longer cooking on lower heat? It would be very reassuring for anyone just setting out, as it's oddly never really been emphasised, either in print or otherwise.
The 'taste' I know now is hot fused spices, the 'aroma' of hot fused spices & tomato paste will be one you are familiar with, if your local actually uses tomato paste across most of its dishes. My local does a basic curry, there is no hint of tomato in it at all, but that burned taste is there. KD, on the face of it was roasting individual spices in gravy rather than tomato, why shouldnt that work, if you got the pan hot enough? She never mentioned anything about heat or any importance of initial cooking either.

The Kushi recipe's again don't mention heat as being significant, again according to their book,
don't use tomato paste
I said it plenty on here recently, that only by introducing heat & ignoring the voice in my head saying "don't burn the spices", have I produced results. Edit-
ignore everything I know & am used to doing while cooking food in a frying pan(never had a frying pan on full blast in my life till now) It's still very hit & miss, but the ingredients & recipe's are as they always were, the only new variable is the inital cooking method. I reckon I could take for example CA's stuff onto a big burner & produce great bir dishes, knowing what I know now. At home on my gas cooker is a little trickier, but I have managed it...you'll just need to trust me on that

Zaal base tastes great on it's own, tried the no tomato approach last night, didn't hit the mark, not sure why yet. Hope to have something a bit more concrete regarding a slower/lower initial cooking method thisn week. It would be great to either count it in or rule it out once and for all
Regards
ELW