I have been following Jerry M's thread on "
What do we know about oil in BIRs ?" with interest, but felt that there was nothing I could usefully contribute until I adopted as my bedtime reading
Dr J S Pruthi's
Spices and Condiments, on the
recommendation of
Ajoy Joshi. What I learned from Dr Pruthi is that the majority of essential oils are extracted by steam distillation, and a little research disclosed that during steam distillation the oils are often yielded at lower temperatures than they would be if the spice were heated dry. This led me to think about Kris Dhillon's methodology, which is radically different from that which is most commonly recommended here : whereas much of CR0's current thinking is that one needs to virtually "cremate" the spices in oil and perhaps a little tomato paste,
Kris's method requires the spices to be added to a boiling stock that is 95% base and only 5% oil. And whilst I know that not all CR0 members accept that Kris's methodology leads to real BIR, IMHO it does, and it is the method that I use preferentially and reliably, all other methods having led to too many failures in the past.
So, what is the connection between steam distillation, Kris Dhillon, and Jerry's quest to learn "what do we know about oil in BIRs" ? Well, it seems to me that Kris Dhillon's methodology is, in fact, well-disguised steam distillation : disguised because the essential oils are not condensed and recovered, as in lab distillation, but rather are yielded during the 10 minutes or so for which the sauce is heated, and are then recovered in the layer of oil that forms on the surface of the curry. This might also explain why Kris recommends at least two different heat settings : high heat for the chillies, lower heat for the cumin and fenugreek (different essential oils being driven off at different temperatures).
And so it seems to me that, if Jerry has not already done so, he might consider trying to make his spiced oil by heating his "chef's masala" not just in oil, but rather in an aqueous base with a sufficient excess of oil to ensure that all the essential oils are either absorbed into the base or collected in the oil (i.e., rather than there being so little oil that there is a risk that some essential oils may be driven off and just sucked up by the hob extractor, which would be a terrible waste).
What do Jerry, and others, think ?
** Phil.