Julien from c2go mentioned 'caramelising' the cooked base in the pan, almost burning it to produce a flavour, which is a term i'v never heard on here regarding the pureed base. could he have been meaning the reduction of the 1st ladle?
Hi there ELW
I'm surprised no-one else contributing to this thread has picked up on your comment here, because for me, this represents one of the most important
new pieces of information I've picked up on this site since I've been here. This could well turn out to be the final piece of the jigsaw I've been looking for.
I've been convinced in my own mind for a long time now that the
final 5% does not exist in ingredients. BIR's do not have access to
special ingredients we don't have access to - they're all commonly available via websites or specialist/wholesale Asian grocery stores. What does and can vary quite considerably (and you only have to look at any random forum post for this to be confirmed) is what people do with those ingredients and how they cook with them. Julian even confirms this in one of his videos - it's 50% ingredients and 50% technique.
I've now read this forum post from beginning to end and it beggars belief how posters can ignore something as important as this and go off at a tangent arguing the toss over chip fat oil!
It's patently obvious I think that this Julian chap knows what he's doing - you can fool some of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all the people all the time - he wouldn't stay in business if he was producing dross dishes that didn't taste right. People wouldn't buy them and they wouldn't come back. If he says he uses seasoned oil from frying onion bhaji's in, then that's exactly what he does and uses in his kitchen. Whether this is
standard BIR technique used throughout the industry is totally irrelevant - it's what he uses.
Quite why posters will then argue that for
them this isn't the answer or refer to this practice as
that old chestnut, I find extremely hard to understand. They don't feel it's the right answer for them, probably because they might be missing something else - that's not to say that fried onion bhaji oil should not be included in the list of
key ingredient's.
Going back to your comment about
caramelising the base sauce in a non-stick pan, I don't believe he's referring to a reduction of the first ladle of base. A reduction will produce a concentration of flavour from the base sauce, caramelisation will produce a sweeter, smokey flavour from the base sauce - two quite distinctive flavours. He's deliberately allowing the base sauce to caramelise or burn slightly on the bottom of the pan to create this flavour.
The dishes I've always produced have always been missing that
smokey, sweet flavour, and given that I've always used an old non-stick pan for producing my dishes I can't help wondering if
for me this could be the
technique I've been searching for to give me that final 5%.
I'm interested in hearing others thoughts on this and what kind of pans they use to produce their dishes.
Cheers and Good Karma!