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The worst part is that this forum is joining the club Haldi.Having been off the forum for some time I come back to see we're now overwhelmed with recipes that rely on Patak's pastes, the very reason why the old style (and infinitely superior) curries are disappearing.It's a bloody tragedy.
.....Patak's pastes, the very reason why the old style (and infinitely superior) curries are disappearing...
it matters not one iota (IMHO) whether the recipe includes Patak's, Shan's or Uncle Tom Cobbley's products so long as it achieves the results we are seeking
Given the amount of diluting of handed down recipes, techniques and the replacement of ingredients with commercially available pastes, it can only mean that finding that old style curry, is even harder to find these days.
I agree. The (more recent) use of commercial pastes is an obvious difference between "old style" BIR curries and "new style" BIR curries.
Same question to you CA: what recipes bring you closest to old BIR - your own?
I can replicate and better most modern Chicken Madras's
Quote from: Philit matters not one iota (IMHO) whether the recipe includes Patak's, Shan's or Uncle Tom Cobbley's products so long as it achieves the results we are seekingThat may be true, in principle, Phil. But, if you're trying to replicate...oh, I dunno, your favourite roast potatoes like your grandmother used to make, and you insist on roasting them in Canola oil from a spray can (or olive oil, say), whereas she roasted them in lard, or beef dripping, then you are probably never going to replicate her roast potatoes, are you? You'd be barking up the wrong tree, I'd say...
Quote from: Phil [Chaa006] on August 27, 2012, 10:08 AMI can replicate and better most modern Chicken Madras'sPlease would you point me to the madras recipe of yours (and any supplementary recipes required to make it) that you consider to be your best, I would be very interested in trying it. Thanks
To date, the closest I've managed to get to this intensity of flavour has been through the use of a good bunjarra (spicy onion paste). The one I make now combines the best of both worlds from the Ashoka bunjarra on here, and the oinion paste in Mick Crawford's (CBM's) book.
in the strange case of past vs present BIRs there is no doubt that things are not, indeed, as they used to be.I suspect that there are many factors which have contributed to this, but one which has come about in recent times is the so-called 'curry crisis', which has received a fair bit of media attention and was brought to light by Julian in the C2G e-book. (For those that haven't heard about it, in a nutshell UK immigration policy changes have resulted in a shortage of Bangladeshi/Indian/Pakistani/ chefs, which means it's so much harder these days for restaurateurs to staff their kitchens with old-school talent.) d bunjarra (spicy onion paste). The one I make now combines the best of both worlds from the Ashoka bunjarra on here, and the oinion paste in Mick Crawford's (CBM's) book.