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I'm going to try making my own butter ghee, i.e. clarified butter. I assume that's a lot healthier. I can also make relatively small quantities. On the occasion I've bought tubs of butter ghee from shops, it's quite expensive and the smell goes off before I've used very much, so it's always ended up in the bin.As for vegetable ghee, it can't be much different to solid margarines which claim to taste quite like butter, whilst not containing any health-threatening elements. Perhaps they're a better alternative. It's difficult to know what a lump of vegetable ghee brings to the party when added to most dishes at Az's restaurant.
prefer lard myself
I can't work out the pattern of the use of ghee. Ashoka use it for some dishes at the frying stage & not others according to the report. Kushi if I remember correctly,mix it with veg oil to start off their tikka masala. One thing i'm certain of is thats it features heavily in the Glasgow bir's. The empty buckets are then used for all manner of things. The thing is, I see both, the big metal containers of oil & the big ghee buckets in the same places.
Quote from: ELW on February 16, 2012, 08:23 PMI can't work out the pattern of the use of ghee. Ashoka use it for some dishes at the frying stage & not others according to the report. Kushi if I remember correctly,mix it with veg oil to start off their tikka masala. One thing i'm certain of is thats it features heavily in the Glasgow bir's. The empty buckets are then used for all manner of things. The thing is, I see both, the big metal containers of oil & the big ghee buckets in the same places. Do all your references refer to vegetable ghee?Ghee (as labelled) is not only clarified butter as mis-stated by noble ox.