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Just give the pan a tilt and look at the colour of the oil. Is this now not seasoned oil? I would say that it is and I would say that it is far more seasoned and concentrate in flavour than a batch of bhaji oil could provide!My usuall method is to start off with way too much oil, and then spoon off what I don't want at the end. I filter this and store in the fridge, then use it to start off my next curry. For me, it seems to add a little depth and sweetness but, it wouldn't be the end of the world if I didn't have it. Maybe you guy's would like to adopt that method to produce a more realistic and practical way of getting your seasoned oil?
My usuall method is to start off with way too much oil, and then spoon off what I don't want at the end. I filter this and store in the fridge, then use it to start off my next curry. For me, it seems to add a little depth and sweetness but, it wouldn't be the end of the world if I didn't have it. Maybe you guy's would like to adopt that method to produce a more realistic and practical way of getting your seasoned oil?Ray
For 2 lb of potatoes,150 ml of veg oil1 tennis ball sized finely chopped onion1 tablespoon of garlic/ginger pasteCassia bark 2" x 1" piece1 bay leaf (Asian)1 tablespoon of panch phoran1 teaspoon of salt2 tablespoons of tomato puree watered down 50/502 teaspoons of turmeric powder1 tablespoon of mix powderWater to cover
But if you used seasoned oil in your main dish, it would add additional flavours to the "seasoned and concentrated" oil which you can prepare each time, so I don't think it can be ruled out for the reason you give.
Ok, let me try to explain it another way then; If I was to add say, 5ml of concentrate cordial, to 50 ml of water (Bhaji oil) then I would have a 10:1 mix ratio of liquid but if I added 10ml of concentrate cordial to 50ml of water (my spooned off oil) then I would have a 5:1 mix ratio, much stronger flavour. So if I combined both the 10:1 mix and the 5:1 mix, I would end up with a mix of 7.5:1 which would result in less flavour than my 5:1 oil. If my calculations are correct, I can't see how the addition of the bhaji oil would add anything more to the dish than my method of spooned off oil would.
I'm sorry but my brain hurts even thinking about trying to work my way through your calculation!!
At the end of the day all that matters is whether your, and anyone else's resultant curries taste very good.
The base this day was start off with oil from the big thick metal wok thing that sits on the burner and is used to fry samosas, bhajis and all sorts of things, no chips though! It was only then that I realized we had fried tandoori chicken wings in the oil before hand as the chef was making a tandoori wing biryani for the buffet and that was what was coming through in the base, at that stage anyway.
In the kitchen at the restaurant I remember one day tasting the base gravy I was preparing and noted that it had a strange/different background taste to it.