Login with username, password and session length
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I love Mr. Naga and i also love and prefer the flavour of scotch bonnets, (in fact, next time i go to london, the guy down the trinidadian place is going to sell me a large coke bottles worth of his hot sauce for a tenner ;D Pure SB flavour!)but to sell dishes as "Naga" when theyre actually scotch bonnets. ...hmmmm, i would feel duped.A bit like passing off Pollack as Cod?or supermarkets selling 2" long chillies and calling them birds eye chillies
I'm loving Ali's videos, he seems very generous with his knowledge and I hope there will be many more to come. Has anyone got the link to the blog he keeps mentioning? I can't see the link anywhere. Thanks
I've just watched the base sauce series (7 or 8 parts), and then the Chicken Madras (2 parts); my impression is that the base sauce added to the Chicken Madras was considerably more fluid than that which we saw at the end of the base sauce series. What do others think ? I was very surprised that Chef Imran added only just over a pint of water to 1kg onions; for the same amount of onions, Kris Dhillon adds 2 3/4 pints, as do I.** Phil.
OMG! Lamb Saag this weekend for sure. Had a go several times in the past. Fresh spinach or frozen block. Just chucked it in the pan; never worked out. This is totally new info for me. Ali is the man!Rob
Quote from: getonthegarabi on December 03, 2012, 09:26 PMOMG! Lamb Saag this weekend for sure. Had a go several times in the past. Fresh spinach or frozen block. Just chucked it in the pan; never worked out. This is totally new info for me. Ali is the man!Rob Rob, if you're into your saag do have a good read of this thread: http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=7892.0 I'm not mentioning it because I started it, but because of the subsequent development work from other forum contributors. For instance, although the Viceroy prepares their saag with no spicing (fine for adding to other dishes, such as saag aloo, lamb saag, etc), if you're wanting a saag bhaji as a standalone side dish, then it really does benefit from the addition of some subtle spices. Even just a touch of turmeric gives it a lovely lift into BIR heaven, but as CH and others have found, a little mix powder takes it a stage further.