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Messages - tempest63

#71
Lets Talk Curry / Re: lentil curry?
October 02, 2023, 09:33 PM
Quote from: bhamcurry on September 22, 2023, 04:06 PM
My wife and son don't like tarka dal - they find it "too dry".

I was wondering if anyone had suggestions for a lentil curry that I could cook instead of tarka dal?

Kabuli Chana recipe from Mrs Balbir Singh's Indian Cookery. It is, without doubt, the best Dhal Recipe that I have in my repetoire and goes down very well with guests as a side dish at any dinner party.

Chana Dhal (to be started the day before it is required)
250g Chana Dhal
720ml water
1.5 teaspoons salt
4 green chillies, 2 whole and 2 chopped
1 inch piece of cinnamon
Seeds of 3 brown cardamoms
4 cloves
0.5 teaspoons cumin seeds
2 teaspoons coriander seeds
15g fresh root ginger finely chopped
8 cloves garlic, chopped
80g ghee
0.5 teaspoon red chilli powder
1 small onion finely chopped, about 160g before peeling
2 to 3 firm tomatoes roughly chopped (I use plum tomatoes)
0.5 teaspoon garam masala
2 tablespoons chopped fresh coriander

Place the Dhal in a large jug and fill with water, swill around until the water turns very milky then drain. Repeat until the water is reasonably clear, drain the Dhal and cover with 720ml of fresh water and leave to stand overnight.

Break up the cinnamon stick and place it in a hot dry frying pan with the cardamom seeds, cloves, cumin and coriander seeds. Dry fry over a medium heat for a few minutes until they become aromatic; take care not to let them burn. Transfer to a pestle and mortar or a spice mill and grind to a fine powder. To the ground spices add the chopped chillies, ginger and garlic and enough water to grind or process to a paste.

Place the Dhal and its soaking water into a saucepan with the two whole chillies and a teaspoon of salt and bring to a simmer. Remove any scum that rises to the top and simmer covered until the Dhal is tender but retains a little bite (al-dente).

Drain the Dhal reserving the stock that has formed, wipe out the saucepan and add the ghee. When it is hot add the chopped onion and fry until it is golden. Remove the pan from the heat and add the red chilli powder. Stir until it is fully incorporated then return the pan to the heat. Gradually add two tablespoons of water, a little at a time allowing it to bubble up and cook off each time.

Add the spice paste and fry for five minutes until the raw smell is cooked out and the ghee separates and rises to the top of the masala. Add the roughly chopped tomatoes and stir them in. Cover the pan and let the tomatoes simmer until they break down and form a homogenous mixture with the masala.

Add the boiled Dhal and stir to mix thoroughly with the masala. Stir over a medium heat for ten minutes gradually incorporating the stock. Cover and simmer over a low heat for twenty minutes. Check for seasoning and add the remaining salt as required. Sprinkle with garam masala and chopped fresh coriander then serve.

A pinch of Asafoetida in the hot ghee before adding the onion is supposed to aid digestion of the dhal.
#72
Lets Talk Curry / Re: It’s Indian week!
September 04, 2023, 09:04 PM
Looks a great menu Robbo.
I hope to be doing something similar with the Parsi cookbook soon.
T63
#73
For those who like a garlic sauce with their Donner Kebab, I found this small batch Lebanese Garlic Sauce (Toum) at this site.
http://chichoskitchen.blogspot.com/2010/04/toum-garlic-lebanese-sauce-recipe.html

If you've ever made Toum most recipes call for a cup or more of garlic, 3 cups of neutral oil with lemon juice and salt in good measures. Only for it to split at the last moment
This Toum is made from only 5 cloves of garlic and one cup of oil. It does have 1 egg white which is a little unusual.
Having made it for the first time today in a few short minutes I am really pleased with the result, it is the lightest and creamiest recipe for Toum that I have used.
I made mine in this small Kitchen Aid (a gift from the kids) which has a small well in the top that allows the oil to drip in at the right speed. I kept the mini-chopper at the lowest speed setting throughout.

https://www.kitchenaid.co.uk/food-processors/859794315020/mini-food-chopper-830ml-5kfc3516-onyx-black

Ingredients:
5 cloves of garlic
1 egg white
1 cup of neutral oil (sunflower is fine)
Juice of 1 lemon
a good pinch of salt
1 cup of iced water of which you will use around 2 tbsp

Put the garlic cloves along with salt and 1/4 of the lemon juice in the blender. Blend on medium and scrape the sides down when the garlic goes flying everywhere. Add the egg white and blend on medium.
Add half the oil in bit by bit. A thin stream is not necessary, but don't go crazy. A reasonable, fine, steady pour is good.

At this stage, the emulsification should have taken place. If it hasn't and the sauce looks like it has split, then something has gone wrong. You may need to remove half the amount, add another egg white, whizz away and re-pour what had already split. But if you take it slow without pouring the oil too quickly, it should be fine.

Switch to a slow blend, and add the rest of the lemon juice in slowly too.
Add the rest of the oil in the same fashion.
Add 1 or 2 tbsp of water. You will see the consistency change into something wonderfully creamy and light.
#74
Quote from: livo on August 19, 2023, 11:44 PM
Why reinvent the wheel? A doner kebab isn't complete without red sauce and toum.

https://allfoodi.com/doner-kebab-red-sauce/

https://dobbernationloves.com/food-drink/kebab-garlic-sauce-recipe/

Sauce Al Toum is, without question, a gift from the gods and I usually make a batch whenever we have people over for a BBQ. But as mentioned elsewhere on this thread for me it has to be lemon juice only, the only option available when I tucked into my first Doner kebabs back in the 1970's.

I noticed that there is a German Doner outlet opened in Chelmsford, their menu mentioned beef and chicken options but no lamb.
#75
Quote from: Peripatetic Phil on August 19, 2023, 12:11 PM
As to "I don't believe I have ever set foot in a Lidl ", I suppose if one has Fortnum's, Harrod's and Selfridge's on one's doorstep, one has little need for Aldi or Lidl, but for those of us banished to the colonies (read: Cornwall), one has little option ...
--
** Phil.

Never set foot in Fortnum's (I don't even know where it is) as for Harrods and Selfridges, read Tesco and Sainsbury's. Admittedly I like Waitrose and M&S but there is no Waitrose within ten miles of us and we venture into M&S only when there are certain products we are after.
#76
Quote from: Peripatetic Phil on August 18, 2023, 08:35 PM
Quote from: Peripatetic Phil on August 14, 2023, 11:54 AM
I am minded to invest in some Iceland King Kebab meat and try re-heating it under the Tepro steak grill on minimum power ...

Cooked some that way this evening — initial reaction was positive, but pleasure started to fade long before I had finished the pitta.  Rather bland, needs salt, not really a patch on the Real Thing™.  The Lidl "shish" (= "seekh") kebabs, on the other hand, remain excellent and I now have 5 packs of six in the freezer and one in the 'fridge.  The only thing that really livened up the Iceland doner kebab was a pickled chilli that I must have had in the 'fridge for well over three months !
--
** Phil.
I feel I may be missing out. From memory I don't believe I have ever set foot in a Lidl and certainly haven't been in an Iceland in over 20 years.
Was Iceland once Bejam or similar?
T63
#77
Lets Talk Curry / Re: Madhur Jaffrey. 40 Years on
August 16, 2023, 11:10 PM
Quote from: Robbo141 on August 16, 2023, 08:45 PM
Outstanding t63.  I just ordered the Dishoom cook book this morning. Need to spend more time cooking and not just reading though.

Robbo

Great book. Good choice.
#78
Lets Talk Curry / Re: Madhur Jaffrey. 40 Years on
August 16, 2023, 05:14 PM
Quote from: Robbo141 on August 16, 2023, 02:23 PM
I have the BBC Books hardcover reprint from 2002. Ive made her turkey kebabs countless times.  Her Curry Easy book is also worth a look. My go-to for red lentils with ginger and tons of other simple recipes.

Robbo

I have the 2002 hardback as well and I'll likely get the revised addition for the new recipes.
I have a few MJ books including the Curry Bible, and her Far Eastern cookbook.
I have some form of OCD when it comes to Indian cookbooks.

#79
Talk About Anything Other Than Curry / Jaggery.
August 16, 2023, 11:57 AM
I finally exhausted my supply of Jaggery during the recent Dhansak experiment, so went to an Indian grocer in Chelmsford who had this product. Question is what is the difference between jaggery and Punjabi Jaggery?

#80
Lets Talk Curry / Madhur Jaffrey. 40 Years on
August 16, 2023, 06:15 AM
I see the Queen of Spice is about to release a 40th Anniversary Edition of the immortal Madhur Jaffrey's Indian Cooking. This was the book that accompanied the TV series and introduced a whole new generation to cooking Indian food.
I have two copies of the original paperback, one I bought new which now looks like it has been dragged through a battlefield and is the working copy I use in the kitchen. The second is a pristine copy that I found in a charity shop which I peruse when flicking through the recipes.
I've hundreds of Indian cookbooks that have arrived since my first MJ but this is really an old friend that I return to time and again. Simple, uncomplicated recipes that have proven a hit with friends over the years.
I doubt there are very few people in our acquaintance that have not eaten her Rogan Josh recipe, albeit with my own twists and turns over the years.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Madhur-Jaffreys-Indian-Cookery-Jaffrey/dp/1526659034/ref=d_wlr_sccl_1_3/257-4403625-9275739?pd_rd_w=CiCGA&content-id=amzn1.sym.d62a13d8-c1e2-4d58-a575-a84f42fb3d58&pf_rd_p=d62a13d8-c1e2-4d58-a575-a84f42fb3d58&pf_rd_r=0V05936KVS246EZQ95CK&pd_rd_wg=verBS&pd_rd_r=eb5f0bf0-7048-4e78-9db7-5a2915977b4d&pd_rd_i=1526659034&psc=1