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I like 'curries' full stop. whether bir or not, but I have to disagree on which tastes better. The flavour hit from the best Indo/Pak restaurants ,regardless of how they're achieved, is something fairly unique. This forum is proof enough of that. I've had homecooked curry in a Pakistani home, where the womenfolk cook all day every day, very tasty, very fresh, yes, but nowhere near as tasty to my palate as the bir version. The food critic & Peter from Family Guy lookalike, Charles Campion, once wrote "tikka masala was created for the ignorant". God knows who he was talking to to but no one was listeing to him thats for sure. Catering for Western palates? They are after all true entrepreneurs.Looking at the whole bir process & the seemingly oblivious chefs, what we like about bir may simply be a by product of a fast, hot commercial environment How does not using a base gravy make it a curry from scratch?RegardsELW
Quote from: ELW on March 09, 2012, 05:51 PMI like 'curries' full stop. whether bir or not, but I have to disagree on which tastes better. The flavour hit from the best Indo/Pak restaurants ,regardless of how they're achieved, is something fairly unique. This forum is proof enough of that. I've had homecooked curry in a Pakistani home, where the womenfolk cook all day every day, very tasty, very fresh, yes, but nowhere near as tasty to my palate as the bir version. The food critic & Peter from Family Guy lookalike, Charles Campion, once wrote "tikka masala was created for the ignorant". God knows who he was talking to to but no one was listeing to him thats for sure. Catering for Western palates? They are after all true entrepreneurs.Looking at the whole bir process & the seemingly oblivious chefs, what we like about bir may simply be a by product of a fast, hot commercial environment How does not using a base gravy make it a curry from scratch?RegardsELW"Family Guy lookalike, Charles Campion..." Lol..."How does not using a base gravy make it a curry from scratch?"Good point, ELW.For instance, I've just made up a quick 'micro base' (a diminutive version of the Zaal base) to cook tonight's vindaloo, and it contained garlic, ginger, onion, red pepper, tomato, cumin, coriander, turmeric, chilli powder, Asian bay, cassia bark, green cardamoms, etc....Sound familiar?Next, I'll be preparing and cooking more of those essential ingredients to add to some of the base to complete the process.The fact is that I have prepared a curry 'from scratch'. I know because it's been ongoing for the last 2 hours.The essential difference between 'traditional' and 'authentic' is surely one of style and technique.
handi curry...amongst various other interesting thingshttp://pakistani-hot-recipes.blogspot.com/2007/06/hot-curry-recipes_13.html