Curry Recipes Online
Curry Base Recipes => Curry Base Chat => Topic started by: Invisible Mike on October 27, 2015, 12:29 AM
-
A question to those members fortunate enough to have been in BIR/TA kitchens.. What do they do with left over base at the end of a service. Do they bin it, reheat and use it as is, or add it to the new base the following day?
Thanks
-
they add fresh base to it, thats part of the reason we cannot at home achieve the elusive final 5% missing 'taste' imagine this going on all year long, its like a 100 year old yeast 'starter' for bread making, google that so you understand where I am coming from.
I posted this topic 3 years ago but no one took it forward?
-
A question to those members fortunate enough to have been in BIR/TA kitchens.. What do they do with left over base at the end of a service. Do they bin it, reheat and use it as is, or add it to the new base the following day?
Thanks
they add fresh base to it, thats part of the reason we cannot at home achieve the elusive final 5% missing 'taste' imagine this going on all year long, its like a 100 year old yeast 'starter' for bread making, google that so you understand where I am coming from.
I posted this topic 3 years ago but no one took it forward?
-
Hi Paul
Yes this is what I was thinking. Have you tried adding old base to new base?
-
I was in a takeaway kitchen about 8 years ago
They were making up a new base and Yes, the old base (which wasn't much) went into the new
All the reclaimed oil went in, and new oil as well
When this chef heats up his curry gravy, for an ordered curry, the aroma is just magic
everything I love about curry, is pretty much there, to start with
Can't be done at home
If I ran a restaurant it would be no problem
It's a combination of elements you can't do with an 8 onion base and just using fresh ingredients
-
Some of them rinse the curry pans back into the smaller working pot of gravy & at least one place I know uses the stock from boiling veg & chicken bones in their gravy.
Regards
ELW
-
Hi Paul
Yes this is what I was thinking. Have you tried adding old base to new base?
Unfortunately no, this needs doing on a commercial scale on a daily basis, its the cumulative effect over months of doing this that makes the difference.
It means your new batch of base will be an amalgum of parts of bases stretching back months if not years.
Simply adding at home some left over base from your last batch to your new batch will have no effect at all.