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Messages - EuanW

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1
Looking great Frank.

The original recipe in this thread is def Tikka Masala, I made it to the letter and it tasted nothing like Butter Chicken. Will perhaps try some of the new ones on here !

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Rogan Josh / Re: Rogan Josh by Razor
« on: August 31, 2017, 03:23 PM »
Thinking still adding the peppers and tomatoes at the first stage with the initial Taz base reduction

I adapted the excellent South Indian Garlic Chilli Chicken recipe on this site, to the Taz base, putting the chopped green chillies and  green pepper in at the first base reduction stage. Overall the results were amazing. Best curry I've ever made.

Looking at the original recipe here, the tomatoes go in after the peppers, so conversely, Id been considering doing it the other way around, adding the tomatoes slightly later on in the forest reduction stage.

Can't wait to get this going tonight, have been away on holiday for two weeks, thinking about cooking  a Lamb Rogan Josh the entire time I was away

Yes to the tomatoes but probably no to the peppers or they'll soften too much.

Edit - have made a mess of quoting the post in replying to, sorry if confusing haha

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Rogan Josh / Re: Rogan Josh by Razor
« on: August 31, 2017, 10:33 AM »
Forum seems dead so this may be a stretch but just did a new batch of Taz base and want to try this Rogan Josh recipe done in the Taz style with lamb. Any advice from more experienced guys would be great. Thinking still adding the peppers and tomatoes at the first stage with the initial Taz base reduction along with all the various whole spices, using bassar mix. Will leave the coriander chilli paste until second base sauce section is added.

Will report back if anyone is still interested !

4
I'm a little confused by this thread. Does it transpire that this is a Chicken Tikka Masala and not a Butter Chicken ? If so, does anyone have any tips on how to adapt it to a Butter Chicken ? One of my friends is requesting I make a Butter Chicken, and I've been going with the Taz Base method for a few months now

I'm thinking just add some cinnamon, almonds and maybe a touch more of ketchup or tomato soup ?

5
Made this tonight, adapting it with the Taz base method , with pre slow cooked lamb. Doubled all the portions. Roasted the Garlic that went in the garlic/chilli paste and added a touch of Tamarind sauce near the end. I have to say, I think its the best curry I have ever made. Better than many of the ones I have had ordered in from Takeaways over years, if I was presented it in a restaurant or in home delivery I would be more than happy with it.

6
I'll throw some local knowledge into this....

Balbirs on Church Street in the west end. As mentioned, they don't use ghee. Restaurant is lovely, product is high quality. Usually have the Bhel Poori, tandoori salmon as starters and Parsi Chicken as a main course

Ranjits Kitchen Southside on the main drag at the very north end of Shawlands. This has a lot of buzz right now. Its small, run by a Pakistani family ( mother and daughters ) and does vegetarian fare. I've still not been but literally every person that I know that has, swears by it. Been meaning to go for aaaaages and its very near me.

Turban Tandoori in Giffnock next  to the train station. Been going there since I was a kid. Quite small and has the traditional feel. Again, quality product and service is great. Does my favourite Peschwari naan I've ever had. King Prawn Masaladar is my favourite curry going just about.

New Turban Tandoori in Giffnock at the roundabout. These two have existed side by side for as long as I can remember. Not quite sure on the dynamic between the two but I've heard various stories on splits, breakaways etc etc. Either way, this is excellent as well. I probably prefer the one at the station at a push but if your passing through the area you will like either option.

The Village in Tradeston. They have two premises here now. Strong long lasting reputation. I've been a handful of times and never disappointed. Some people swear by it.

The Dhabba in Merchant City. Bit of buzz due to locale, and done with a bit of pizazz and a fresh take. Been a good while since I was in, but the lamb on the bone dish I had was fantastic. I'm yet to visit the the sister restaurant across the road that does South Indian.

Shish Mahal in Woodlands road area. Oldest in Glasgow along with the Koh-I-Noor at Charing Cross. Traditional and solid. I saw the bad review somewhere else on this site. I've been maybe 10-15 times and its always been decent. Doesn't contain the wow factor of some of the others.

Some people swear by Mother India at Kelvingrove. I've never been.
I see Anarkali was mentioned. An ex girlfriends dad swore by it, calling it the best in the city. Only had takeaways and I wasn't too impressed. I'd say its maybe a more reasonably priced TA standard type of affair than some of the ones mentioned above.


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British Indian Restaurant Recipe Requests / Re: Masaledar sauce?
« on: July 17, 2017, 05:38 PM »
Hi EuanW, I tend to disregard the menu wordings of dishes as I'm sure you will have came across  word for word descriptions across many Glasgow menus.
"special blend of Punjabi spices" seems to feature heavily, which is clearly selected from a drop  down menu at the printers.
The masaladar/masalader sauce is definitely  an offshoot of a pathia rather than a Punjabi masala. If you play about with the quantities of mango chutney, ketchup, base gravy, sugar&  lemon,, you will get close to what your after.
Of course, if you don't know your local restaurant or t/a's gravy recipe, it won't be the  same thing.
Depending on how much pathia/chasni/masalader they knock out, they will normally  have a ready made sweet and sour paste to make all those  3 dishes.
The jhal/ tandoori/red sauce paste is not what goes in a masaladar. For example,that would be in a Japuiri curry, which you've probably had one being Glaswegian
Regards
ELW

*I'm in Glasgow myself, so if you want to post your Glasgow restaurant / t/a good & bads I'm all ears

Hey mate, I actually did a run of this last night using Stephen Lindsays Patia recipe with Taz base, so that's thanks to you and your recommendation !

Doubled all his portions as I usually like to have some the next day and/or freeze.

Suffice to say it turned out brilliantly and was about 95% bang on with a Masaladar.  All I did was add plenty of pre cooked chopped green peppers, one desert spoon each of Tamarind sauce, Tomato ketchup and distilled white vinegar and added a very healthy dose of chopped up coriander through the curry.

As I say, it turned out brilliantly and I was ecstatic. I've got some pictures I'll put up as well.

The restaurant I was referring to is the Turban Tandoori in Giffnock next to the train station. I've been going there since I was a kid, and whilst I don't live in the area now, I'm not too far away so still get deliveries and go in from time to time

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Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Sat sri akaal
« on: July 16, 2017, 02:30 PM »
Hey guys,

Just realised I kind of joined and just started posting immediately without saying hi so..... hi !

I'm Glaswegian, 35 years old, love my cooking ( comes from my mum and her profession ) and am on a bit of curry cooking mission right now, trying to get that up to scratch and in my arsenal. I think most of the Indians I go to around my area - Glasgow Southside and west end generally - are of Punjabi orientation.

Site looks like a wealth of great info and a bit of a godsend so advance thank you's to all that have contributed over the years

Euan

9
House Specialities / Re: North Indian Special with Taz Base
« on: July 16, 2017, 01:52 PM »
Did a batch of this last night.

I doubled all portions and cooked a double portion of chicken.

Used chicken tikka which I marinated for a day then cooked under the grill for 10-15 mins to slightly char the outside making sure I didn't over cook so the chicken retained moisture and was nice and soft.

I used Bassar mix in place of standard chilli powder
Used Garam Masala instead of the BE spice mix

Apart from that, everything was the same. It turned out really well and had a very strong tasteful flavour.

Thanks to Stephen for working like a trojan and producing many recipes using the Taz base method, it worked really well for me and it was fun seeing how far you could go taking the initial base portion and spices down.


10
British Indian Restaurant Recipe Requests / Re: Masaledar sauce?
« on: July 16, 2017, 01:47 PM »
The original thread ? Is there another thread regarding Masaladar, or do you just mean this thread ? Yeah I had a thorough look through this thread. The closest thing I saw, and that was purely from visual aesthetics from the video that was supplied, was the Jalfrezi that is mentioned that adds the Jhal/red masala mix. I'm not sure if thats just a straight up Jalfrezi though.

Alas, as previously stated, my fairly intensive internet searching has yielded no discernable results apart from finding this thread. Anything that comes up on internet searches looks a lot drier and completely different.

Perhaps its time to just start experimenting on my own and trying to replicate, just wish I had put as many hours into honing curries as I have with my various chilli's, maybe then I'd stand a better chance.

Once again, thanks for your reply.
Hi EuanW, a pathia recipe will be very close to a masaladar. It's virtually identical. There is maybe a bit of ketchup in some masaladar recipes
ELW

They are definitely not without similarities, Patia and Masaladar, but there is a difference. It's a long time since I had a Patia in fairness, I kind of moved away from it and Chasni in my early 20s as my tastes developed.

I will try out something though and make a few adjustments - inclusion of roughly chopped green peppers, maybe an addition of tamarind in place of lemon juice, some tomato ketchup which should create a tanginess with the vinegar in it, coriander will be my starting points.

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