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Topics - DARTHPHALL

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1
Phall / Chicken Phall!!
« on: December 03, 2011, 05:40 PM »
Sorry but im unable to find all my old notes, so i will post this very good Phall recipe.

Most of it is taken from Pat Chapmans Indian Restaurant Cookbook with amendments from my memory.

I will be cooking this tomorrow & hopefully the old cooking habits will come flooding back. I hope also to post some pictures.

This is the Oven version without a base, a base can be added, see below.

Please read all the way through before cooking.

Salt may be added but ive not included in ingredients or spice mix, read below.

Ingredients:

1 1/2LB/675g Chicken Breast.
1 Large Onion, finely chopped.
8 cloves Garlic, finely chopped (you can use Galic paste).
1oZ /25g fresh Ginger, finely chopped (You can use Ginger paste)
3 tablespoons Oil.
Half a 400g tin tomatoes (A full tin makes this dish too rich) or 200g passata.
20 Fresh or dried chillies, Add more if you wish, but the taste will change, if you like extreme heat, use one of the chilli essences available online  ;)

Spice Mix:

1 teaspoon ground Cumin.
1 Teaspoon ground Coriander.
3 Teaspoons chilli powder (more can be added, as some like the chili powder taste)
1 Teaspoon dried Fenugreek leaves.
1 Teaspoon Garam masala.

Method:

Make the spice mix add a little warm water to help make a paste.
Chop Chicken breast.
Fry Onion, Garlic & Ginger until it starts to go golden brown in half of the oil, keep eye on this as the garlic tends to stick to the pan very quickly, keep mixing & stirring. Add spice mix, cook for further 5 minutes.
Add 200g chopped tomatoes/or Passata, half tin of water (200g) & chopped chicken breast cook for 5 minutes.
Added a 400g tin of water to stop it burning/catching.
Pre heat oven at 400f/200c, Gas 6.
Add all cooked ingredients to a Pyrex or casserole dish (must have a lid)

Cook for 40 minutes. DONE!  8)

Brief notes I can remember  :)

1. The art to the oven method is how the ingredients reduce & learning to achieve a consistency in ingredient reduction which in turn you will also learn to maintain consistency in flavour.

2. Reduce too much & it will turn out very thick, sweet & rich, not enough & it may turn out a little too bland, also you need to decide on the amounts of Salt to your particular taste.

3. I have made the above & added my base mix, this will just give more curry & also give you a texture closer to a BIR.

4. You can blend the ingredients also to give an even more authentic texture, but i feel that you should keep it simple, concentrate on consistency of taste first; the other aspects of the BIR are easier to achieve. 

5. I haven

2
Talk About Anything Other Than Curry / Admins?
« on: December 01, 2011, 11:15 AM »
Just checking the site out & trying to get back to speed.

Have noticed that the curry king hasn't been active since April 04, 2011!

Questions;

Who is moderating his sections in his stead & what has happened to the guy?

3
Talk About Anything Other Than Curry / Powelifting!
« on: November 28, 2011, 08:34 PM »
Hi,

Anyone into powerlifting on this site or wants to consider it, I have a little experience & I am glad to help any new people to the sport.  :)

I?m currently doing the Stronglifts 5X5, I am on week 6 of my 10 week phase.

Main Goals (Single rep/lift).

500LB Deadlift
500LB Squat
340LB Bench Press (this will be the hardest to achieve this year me thinks) after that my ultimate goal is a single lift 500LB Bench Press.

Lifts that I do & current weights used for reps...

Overhead Press: 139.5 LB for 5 sets of 5 reps...
Bent over Row (Overhand Grip): 191.25LB for 5 Sets of 5 reps...
Bench press: 204.75LB 5 sets of 5 reps...

I have loads of weight training e- books if anyone wants them emailed, just PM me.

DARTHPHALL  8)  :D
   

4
Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / IM BACK!
« on: November 16, 2011, 06:56 PM »
Hi,

To all the new peeps of the forum & a big HI again to any of the old ones who remember dear old DARTHPHALL  :D

Been over 4 years i think  :o


Came across this site a week or so ago, forgot the old place  :)

Got a lot of reading to do  ;D

Thanks to Stew for sorting my old acount out  ;)

5
Lets Talk Curry / If you wish to contact me about my recipe's.
« on: March 16, 2007, 10:30 AM »
HI all.
If you need to contact me about any of my recipes please post a message in the forum* anytime, i will always be glad to help you in any way, i am unable to accept PM's until further notice.
All the best.

.....DARTHPHALL....

*edited by CA on 17/3/07

6
Curry Web Links / Loads !!
« on: October 28, 2006, 08:56 PM »
Here is a link with loads of Curry & other recipes, there is even a Curry with Coca Cola in it  ;D

 http://www.astray.com/recipes/?search=indian

7
Lets Talk Curry / Copying a Bir, some points.
« on: October 19, 2006, 04:01 PM »
After reading several comments i will try & put some good points down in this new thread.
If you strongly disagree feel free to post your alternative method/ingredients & reasons.
All these points are from many members here on the forum.

1. Oil is necessary to gain the Bir style.

2. Do not overSpice.  A:Try not to use too many different Spices in a single Recipe.
                                  B: Try not to add too much quantity of Spice in your recipe.

3. If your going to achieve the Bir "Taste", "Smell" you should know on the day of cooking if you have succeeded or not.

4. Judging by comments & my own perceptions Tomato puree/Ketchup & Tin tomato's may be used but in less quantities than many recipes give you (including my own).

5. there is a general concensus that it is method rather than a particular Ingredient that produces the Bir "Taste" & or "Smell".

Thats for starters, hope my assumptions are correct, if you have any other basic rules you think we need to add just post away, as the site is big & a general rule/tips thread would be of help to us all. :)

8
Lets Talk Curry / Question about "The taste" or "the smell".
« on: October 15, 2006, 05:22 PM »
Question for those who have a Bir with" The taste" Or "the Smell".

If you buy two identical Curries with the Taste & keep one for the next day & re-heat it you find that "the Taste" or smell has almost if not all gone, i have asked this countless times, does someone else notice this?
If so (this is for you who are Chefs) does this not indicate it to be a flavor enhancer.
Common this may end up being an important clue peeps.

9
Cooking Equipment / Hot Wok.
« on: October 07, 2006, 01:19 PM »
Thought I'd post this little baby for you all.
http://www.gardenbliss.co.uk/products/index.asp?TID=901&ID=2905
It is available everywere, this link is just an example so you know what it looks like, do a search & you will find loads & at very differing prices, eBay was the cheepest the last time i looked.

This is an amazing little piece of kit for those of us who don't have Gas Cookers & like myself prefer to cook outside (even in the Winter).
I have contacted the actual Manufactures & they have replied & confirm that this is a 7kw Gas Burner (i had my doubts & still do, I'm sure some of you peeps here will be able to clarify).
It is supposed to be an equivalent to a 7000 Watt Cooker, does this necessarily mean it is 7kw in Gas terms.
Cheers for now.
.....DARTHPHALL..... :)

10
Madras / Madras/Vindalloo/Phall.
« on: October 07, 2006, 11:33 AM »
I cooked a Phall using Pat Chapmans Recipe/Technique in his book Indian Restaurant Cookbook (ISBN 0-86188-378-0) & my Base.

I will try & keep this short as possible but this must be explained so all understand it.

Recently i have got a little lost in my curry making, they have been to dam good, they are just too tasty & unlike Bir fare.
Thats it though, making a great tasting Curry is now easy if you follow some of the best bases here on this site.
The real quest is capturing that Spicy/oily flavor we all love "The taste".
I have in the past mentioned this, cooking in the Oven is a very good way of recreating the Bir flavor, because it does work.
I cooked a Phall last night & it had "the taste" but was difficult to perceive because the curry was so tasty.
I have had this so many times now using the oven method that i will be incorporating it with many other attempts from now on.
I get a feeling it does have a lot to do with the Oil (the carrier of flavor in a Curry) & is not a missing Ingredient as i don't remember putting anything in it that taste like it does, in fact its very basic a recipe.
The prolonged cooking time & heat in the Oven must change the properties of the Oil & the Spices therein etc..
One thing noticed is because the Curry changes the next day so much, it makes it difficult to judge it's final flavor whilst in the cooking stage, you taste it as you cook & add more ingredients as it is quite mediocre initially (so we think), this may be why we have difficulty getting it right.
Following PC's recipe to the Book produces a very dam close Phall (even though it isn't that hot compared to a Bir Phall) .
Here is the recipe & method with my alterations, this will make one hell of a good Curry but is just way too tasty if you understand what i mean.

PHALL.

INGREDIENTS.
1 500ml bag of my Base gravy from here http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php?topic=674.0
675g Meat or poultry (i used Chicken).
1 large Onion.
1 whole Garlic bulb.
A Small 1 inch piece of Ginger.
10 Tablespoons Vegetable oil.(keep the bottle out when you are cooking, i will be using much more next time i do this)  ;)
400g tin chopped Tomatoes.
1 Tablespoon Tomato Ketchup.
1 """""""""""" """""""" Puree.
Half Teaspoon Salt.

SPICES 

1 Teaspoon ground Cumin.
""""""""""""""""""""" Coriander.
3 Teaspoons Basaar mix (Cheers Ray) you may use Chilli powder instead (i will next time).
1 Teaspoon dry Fenugreek leaves.
1 teaspoon Garam Masala (i used Tesco's own brand, any will do).

GET THE INGREDIENTS READY.

1. Chop the meat.
2. finely Chop the Onion.
3. Puree the Garlic & Ginger (peel first).
4. Mix the SPICES & Salt with some warm water to make a paste.
5. Mix & blend till smooth the Tin of tomatoes (Take them out of the Tin first  ;D),Ketchup & tomato puree.
   
METHOD

Did the cooking on medium heat so the dishes did not spit everywere.

1. Fry Onion/Garlic & Ginger puree till Golden in 6 tablespoons of Oil. 
2. Add the Spices mixture & cook for 10 minutes.
3. Add blended Tomatoes/Puree & Ketchup, cook for further 10 minutes.
4 Meanwhile fry the meat in a separate pan until sealed (7-8 minutes will do) in 4 Tablespoons of Oil (use more if you need too or like too  ;D). 
5. Combine all the ingredients (including the juices/Oil from the cooked Chicken Pan) in a large dish with a lid & cook in a pre-heated Oven at 400f(200c) Gas 6 for 45-60 minutes (i cooked for 50 minutes).
6.Leave until next day.

CONCLUSION

The next time i cook this i will be doing the following.

I personally thought the curry tasted to good & would recommend the following to get it closer to a Bir style dish.
1. Don't bother with the Salt.
2. Replace the Basaar mix with Chilli powder.
3. Use much more Vegetable Oil (to your own preference & i feel that the Oil is very important, the dish ended quite Oil free the next day) i would suggest 20 Tablespoons (you can save the excess if it has too much for your taste).
4. Leave out the Ketchup.
5. After just having ate a Bowl of it i would recommend you put half of the amount of Base Gravy to make it as thin as Bir standards, but thats what we want, weird isn't it, we want to cook thin watery Curry instead of the lovely stuff we can allready cook.
6. You may want to add some water to the ingredients when you put them in the dish in the Oven.
All in all i believe it is very worthwhile experimenting with this dish to bring it closer to a lower quality Bir style dish, i may even follow PC's recipe for base Gravy, which Ive never done before.

I hope this is clear & understanding for all members, give it a go I'm sure you will be pleasantly surprised, either way, please do let me know how it turned out.

Regards,
.....DARTHPHALL..... 8)

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