About a year ago I decided to embark on a quest to learn how to cook the meals that are served in British Indian restaurants (BIR?s), the first source of knowledge I found was a book by Kris Dhillon ? The Curry secret, on reading this I thought my prayers had been answered, she explained all the secrets of the trade and it all sounded perfect. One of my favourite curries at the time was Chicken Tikka Masala so I decided to try that from Kris? book, it was a good curry but CTM it wasn?t, at this point I realised that Kris? book was probably too old now so I started looking again and found Pat Chapman?s book.
The new curry bible is subtitled ?The ultimate modern curry house recipe book? - sounded promising!
The book is a superb read, forgetting about the recipes for a minute the book is fascinating for any curry lover and has the best colour photographs I have seen in a cookbook. It goes into much of the history of curry dish by dish next to the recipes, goes into detail about differing curry styles around the world and describes the qualities of all the different ground/whole and herb ingredients in Indian cooking. While it is aimed at the Indian restaurant curry enthusiast it also has authentic dishes side by side to the BIR ones, which is interesting.
OK let?s get to the recipes. The book is split into the following sections:
Starters, Kebabs, Tandoori and Tikka. The curries themselves are in 3 sections: Top 16 curries, 16 favourite curries and 16 house specials. Then we have vegetable and dhal curries, side dishes and finally deserts.
As you can see its quite comprehensive with loads of recipes, the 16 top curries section is all the restaurant favourites: balti, jalfrezi, korma etc, the other 32 main curries are a bit more exotic and very interesting to read about.
Some people have complained about the structure of the book, you are constantly flipping back between pages to get to the various spice mixes and marinades but I found this not too bad.
OK, the bottom line, what are the recipes like? In a word ? varied. Some are top drawer like the balti recipe, prawn puree & madras, some are average or not quite right ? bhuna, CTM, onion bhajis. The biggest problem I have with the book is the base curry sauce I feel is not quite right or poorly explained and seeing as it is the basis for a lot of the restaurant lookalike recipes this is a problem. (see
http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=62.msg215#msg215 for a discussion on it). I did mail Pat on the subject of this base sauce but didn?t get a very useful reply (although I was surprised to get any reply at all to be honest).
One other word of warning, the base curry masala mix, tandoori masala mix and garam masala contain ingredients that a lot of people will be hard pressed to find ourside of a very good asian grocer (beetroot powder, annato seed, black cardamom amchoor etc)
In summary I would rate it highly overall because it is so well presented and is such a good read, however it is not always spot on with the restaurant recipes and the base sauce recipe is iffy.? I might try out the recipes using Pete?s base instead.