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Topics - benbob

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I have been eating at the Himachol for over 20 years first with my parents and now with my own family.

The food is superb, why else would I be recommending them here!

They regulary add new dishes to the menu and not just mains a few highlights are:

Starters

Chicken Chot Puri - Chicken spiced with Tamarind and Bengali mixed spices
Jalali kebab - Marinated chicken cooked BBQ style, a fantastic unique taste that I have never experienced anywhere else.

Mains

From their standard dishes I can highly recomend the Bhuna, Dupiaza and Madras are all very good.

Its their specials that start to rock the boat

Garlic chili chicken is the best in the area (IMO)
Murgh Barhar - chicken and minced lamb topping is a wonderful dish with areal depth of flavour that i cant begin to replicate at home.
Chicken Naga - Cooked with a naga pickle its not as hot as you'd imagine but its a great dish.

All in all a top restaurant and take-away if anybody ever comes to Poole or Bournemouth for a holiday its well worth seeking out.

www.himachol.co.uk

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Traditional Indian Recipes / Traditional Tandoori Chicken
« on: February 25, 2012, 02:20 PM »
I have been making this Tandoori chicken for around 15 years now and it never fails to deliver :) I don't know where this came from as it was given to me on a typed sheet and has since been copied to my PC.

I marinade a whole chicken and cook it using the rotisserie on the BBQ, perfect summer food for family and friends served with new potatoes and a fresh salad  ;D

You will need

1 whole chicken
10 tablespoons of lemon juice
1 Tabelspoon of salt

Marinade

10 Cloves
2 teaspoons of coriander seeds
2 teaspoons of cumin seeds
seeds of 10 Cardamons
2 onions, chopped
4 glarlic cloves, crushed & chopped
7cm piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated
2 teaspoons of chili powder
2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
2 teaspoons of Turmeric
350ml natural yogurt
Red food colouring (optional)

Carefully remove all the skin from the chicken and discard.
Wash and dry the chicken.
Score the breast, legs and thighs several times with a sharp knife and place the chicken in a container (with a lid) big enough to hold the bird but small enough to fit in your fridge.
Sprinkle the salt and lemon over the chicken and rub in with your hands, ensuring you work the mixure into the scores but not hard enough to damage the meat.
Cover and place in the fridge for an hour.

Now for the marinade:

Spread the cloves, coriander, cumin and coriander seeds on a baking tray and roast in a preheated oven at 200?C/gas mark 6 for 20 minutes, keep an eye on them and make they dont burn! Remove, cool and grind them coursely in a mortar.

Put onions, garlic, ginger, chili powder, black pepper, turmeric, yogurt and ground roasted spices in a food processor and blend until smooth (oh and red colouring if using), also strain the lemon juice from the chicken into the mixture.

Pour the marinade over the whole chicken and leave it in the fridge to marinade for at least 24 hours. I regulary turn the chicken and spoon the marinade over the chicken to ensure good coverage.

Cook over a red hot BBQ for ever so tastey tandoori chicken :)

Obviously this works just as well with legs/thighs, I find this cut is extremely well proced at my butchers and works just as well.

I've alwasy assumed this is a tradional method as the ingredients are different to any BIR 'style' recipe I use. Either way its a great way to BBQ a whole chicken and tastes fantastic.


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Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Hello fellow curry lovers
« on: February 20, 2012, 08:18 PM »
Hi,

I have been cooking traditional curries for around 15 years now and have always enjoyed the results but have craved that resturant flavour and consistancy. Last year I recevied Kris Dhillon's the curry secret as a gift and havent looked back. After being extremely happy with the currys produced I have started to think that in essence they all taste very similar! Of course this could be down to my method but i'm hoping it's something more, something that I'm missing out on ;)

I hve noticed that a lot of the other recipes for 'base sauce' have far more ingredients than the 1 I use. I appreciate with any cooking, that adding too many flavours can can have an adverse effect but I can also see that finding a happy balance is the name of the game.

I have spent some time looking through the site and have decided that I'm going to try CA's base sauce first as in essence it is the nearest to what I'm used to in many ways and totally different in others  :-\

I also have loads of questions especially regarding the distinctive flavours acheived in certain BIR's dishes that I havent been able to replicate at home.

Like how do you get that deep smokey flavour to Bombay Potatoes? A personal quest of mine that has encompassed buying the most expensive smoked paprika I could find and also (after some advice from my local Curry House) roasting the potatoes rather than par boiling them. Unfortunately neither of these methods have acheived the flavour I crave.

Oh I have so many questions my mind is going to explode.

Ben

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