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Topics - haldi

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1
Lets Talk Curry / Adey Paynes Online Cooking Course
« on: August 22, 2016, 05:50 PM »
I can't be alone in receiving promotional Facebook information about this

Is anyone going to be doing this online course with Adey?

I saw a price somewhere
I think it was about ?70

I think that videos generally is what made this forum become so quiet
Perhaps it all seems a little old hat, typing stuff out
It used to be the only source of info

2
Me and my wife went to the Prince of India at Windermere,  on Tuesday
Best curry house I've been to, for a long time
I had a vegetable Balti
Lovely simple flavour, with that something extra, that I can't make at home!
Fantastic sauce and vegetables cooked with still a little bite

Vegetable Rhogan Josh
This wasn't as expected but still delicious
Very tomatoey and moreish flavour

The naan was amazing
so light it nearly floated of the plate
It was seriously fantastic
It was brushed with melted butter too (wish I had one now!)

the poppadoms were served with 4 pickles/chutneys:-
the standard chopped onion with mint sauce, yoghurt rhata, lime pickle and an amazing garlic pickle
I tell you, that garlic pickle on top of a bit of poppadom was truly incredible
I can buy that stuff round here
I'm going to get some tomorrow

Wish I could go back again to this restaurant
but it's 170 miles away
Crying shame


the place was 3/4 full and the staff were polite and very helpful

If you are in the area, check it out
The bill was ?22
The only downside is that it's upstairs
I couldn't see any special lift, or help for anyone with mobility difficulties

here's a link
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/place/Prince+Of+India/@54.3780618,-2.9055278,3a,75y,82.81h,90t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1s0YuJl0RR1YNXSScqC12g5w!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!4m2!3m1!1s0x0:0x60861deb4a3c04a0!6m1!1e1



3
Lets Talk Curry / Adey Payne Cooking Lesson in Boston
« on: August 15, 2014, 04:57 PM »
Anyone just starting BIR cooking should check out Adey's courses
Although I have been cooking BIR at home for many years Adey still managed to show me cooking Techniques and how he makes his base
There was a lot to learn
It was over 2 four hour lessons that we covered:-

Base gravy
Spice mix
ginger garlic puree
garlic puree
Tomato paste
Service Onions
Onion Bhajee
Spiced oil

Curries:-
patia
vindaloo
madras
rhogan
bhajee

He cooked a curry and then I had a go

Adey is making a living at this so told me not to reveal recipes
Sorry
But if you check out Adey and Julians recipes on youtube, it's pretty much all there
His gravy is particularly good

Doing the course has refined my technique
Adey stands over you as you cook
He tells you what heat is required, and when
He prompts you for the ingredients

He is also a very decent bloke, as are the other staff I met

If I'd had this course at the start of my curry cooking, it would have taken years off my search
The curries are not identical to ones I buy locally, but are definite BIR quality

4
You can eat in at Munchies, Mansfield Road, Nottingham or take out
I wouldn't bother doing either again
I'm a little late writing this up as it happened a week ago
I bought three curries from there
Vindaloo, Madras and Vindaloo and they were so dull, it was unbelievable
We never even finished them
Bland and tasteless
I can cook far above this standard, and I don't think I'm good enough
The vegetables used were from a pack of "frozen vegetables"
I reckon it was a cheap one, as well (Adsa smart price maybe?)
You can tell by the baby carrots, and bits of corn in it
A waste of money, never going there again

5
I got food from the Shabab, Radford Road, Nottingham last night
Chicken Roghan Josh, Veg Vinadaloo, Veg Madras,Veg Rhogan Josh ,3 Pillau Rice, 1 Naan,Poppadoms and chutneys.
(I have recently lost my favourite takeaway and this place was recommended)
I collected as they don't deliver, and there was some sort of a celebration going on
There was a gang of people outside chuffing away on their ciggies and I fought my way through
The restaurant was absolutely packed
All seats taken, and people shoulder to shoulder
They must have been making a fortune

I paid for the curries and brought them home
I'm told that this restaurant is run by Pakistanis, so I was expecting a different type of curry
Most of my locals have been Bangladeshi places

The aroma from the carrier bag filled the car and that's always a very good sign
The food was really excellent
A clean fresh taste with a hint of ground cummin and fenugreek leaves
The vindaloo was really hot & brilliant
The madras full of flavour
The rhogan joshes were smothered in fried garlic and tasty
I would definitely use them again
They aren't the best I've had, but they are pretty good
At the moment, I don't know anywhere that is better


6
Highly Recommended British Indian Restaurants / Arjee Bhajee
« on: March 10, 2013, 05:48 PM »
Arjee Bhajee
07805579624
Crowthorne Gardens
Nottingham
NG5 5AQ

I've had meals twice from this place and they are absolutely amazing
It's not "back to the eighties" but it's the next best thing
I had almost given up hope of finding anywhere good, since Bombay Style on Alfreton Road closed.
We had paneer rhogan josh, veg vindaloo,veg phall and garlic coriander naan.
I made the special rice & mushroom rice ,using the Viceroy recipes which are absolutely fantastic
Check those recipes out they are world class.
You can watch again and again to see all detail
I used East End madras curry powder for the spice mix

All the bought curries had a wonderful aroma, and a similar underlying flavour
So they have a brilliant curry gravy!
The rhogan josh was so garlicky (lovely)
the vindaloo had a good heat and subtle spicing
and the phall had the extra heat, I so love
It came to just over ?12
The last time I spent money so worthwhile, was went I ordered from them before
If they are near you, try them out
You won't be sorry




7
Lets Talk Curry / Death of the Taste
« on: August 21, 2012, 09:29 AM »
I can honestly say that I don't know where to buy an indian takeaway that still has "the taste"
There has been a sudden change of old places being taken over, or new places coming along
The whole flavour of curries has changed
They are generally bland and some are only equal to the flavour of a supermarket curry sauce

The final nail in the coffin, was the closing of the takeaway Bombay Style, on Alfreton Road
All the old school chefs are gone

I used to drive myself crazy at why my curries were sub standard taste
Well, now the're not
But for all the wrong reasons

I'm still trying "new" places, perhaps luck will favour me in re finding my curry nirvana
But the classic takeaway scene is clearlyly vanishing
Ironically, I would guess it's from improving hygene standards

Well perhaps life will be longer due to these changes
Longer but not richer
I remember eating cold classic curry for breakfast
I have even thrown "new" curry away

I live in Nottingham
Does anyone know of anywhere that still does the old business?

8
Lets Talk Curry / Making a Full Sized Base at Home
« on: June 17, 2012, 09:05 AM »
Full Size Curry Gravy

There were no excuses left, but plenty of unproved theories
Years of failure, finally required some ghosts, to be laid to rest

I have a really large stainless steel cook pot
I begged it, off a chef, a few years ago
It cost nothing
One handle is loose, so it can?t be lifted when hot and full, and there is no lid
I have to use a lid, from a wok

I have a second hand BIR gas hob

What held me back for years, was the fear of cooking a curry gravy to a wrong recipe
I didn?t want that level of wastage, without justification

Last year I got into the kitchens, of a local Indian Restaurant kitchen
I was shown twice, in detail, how they make the Curry Gravy
I also saw various stages of the gravy, being cooked, on several other occasions
One thing became clear, the only random element, is the oil used
Sometimes this would be the oil from the chip fryer
Sometimes the oil from cooking poppadoms
Sometimes from oil from cooking poppadoms first and then onion bhajees
I never saw fresh used

Although this experiment is clearly excessive, it was fairly cheap too
Two 4 kg bags of onions cost ?1.98, Poppadoms ?7.60, Oil  ?2, pepper, carrots, chick peas & tomatoes about ?3
So ?15 to prove, or disprove a point
And hopefully some first class curries with gravy to freeze

I began, on Friday evening


I roughly chopped 8kg of onions to nearly fill the large saucepan
I added 2 carrots, 1 green pepper, 1 400g can of chick peas, 2 400g cans of tomatoes & enough water to bring the level to half way up the pot

The pot was brought  to the boil then simmered covered for two hours
(using my antique Ken Hom wok lid)

Meanwhile, I heat 1 ? litres of ktc veg oil, in Ken?s large wok
I cooked 60 poppadoms

Yes, this is where you start questioning how far, you can go.

I saved 20, the rest were crunched & binned
After 30 poppadoms, were cooked, the oil seemed to lose it?s heat
It required turning the gas up, to increase it?s temperature
I had planned to cook the whole pack of 100
But the oil was clearly getting past it?s best

After the oil had cooled, I poured the oil into a pyrex jug
There was only a litre left
The aroma was (unsurprisingly) poppadoms and it was very cloudy

I waited until the next day to continue the recipe, because that?s what the restaurant did
So bright and breezy, on Saturday morning, I continued
I reheated the pot of onions and simmered for another hour
Then I added 1 chef spoon of turmeric & 1 ? chef spoons of salt.
I simmered it another ten minutes, then blended
Now, that was a job and a half!
It took about ten minutes to get to a fine consistency

I heated the litre of poppadom oil and added 3 chef spoons of garlic ginger puree, 400g of tomato puree and gently folded the purees together in the pan, as it rose to a simmer
After five minutes I added 3 chef spoons of spice mixture (coriander,cumin,paprika,madras powder,turmeric)
After a couple of minutes the spices stopped fizzing and I added the oil into the pureed onion pot.
I stirred everything really well, for a couple of minutes

The recipe was nearly complete
All that was needed was to simmer the pot until the oil separated again.
This took another hour and red oil, rose to the top, of the gravy

At the end of cooking the gravy really looked the part, but didn?t smell right
Maybe I had been overexposed to spices
I honestly don?t know

Anyhow, a couple of hours later I used some, to cook a recipe shown me by the author of this gravy

Tarka Dhall
I heated some fresh oil (in my BIR pan) and added 1 ? chef spoons of precooked lentils (They are simply boiled with a little turmeric)
Stir this all round for a couple of minutes, until the mixture dries out
Then I added 1 desertspoon of spice mixture, 1 teaspoon fenugreek leaves and ? teaspoon of salt
Stir this round the pan for a couple of minutes, scraping the pan
It does stick!
Add 2 ladles of curry gravy and simmer/reduce for five minutes.
In another pan, on a low heat, I added a little oil
Into this I put 3 sliced cloves of garlic and a desertspoon of chopped fresh coriander.
I stir fried this for about three minutes, so the garlic was just turning brown at the edges
It?s not wanted dark brown, and is easily burnt!
At this stage I poured the garlic oil, over the lentils
Tarka Dhall ready!

The curry was good
Probably as good as ones I had bought from the restaurant
My wife loved it
But in no way had I made any quantum leap, with my cooking
No extra fantastic flavor appeared
I would conclude that , cooking in quantity, doesn?t affect the gravy outcome
I would also conclude that my wheely bin stinks of crushed poppadoms and old onion skins

I shall freeze a couple of litres of gravy, and who knows, when I thaw it out, the curry fairies may have worked their magic








10
Lets Talk Curry / Zaal Phaal
« on: April 07, 2012, 07:33 PM »
Sorry, but I couldn't find the original post to add to

A while ago, I cooked a chicken phaal, as per the Fleet demo
I used the Fleet base too

At the time I thought it was ok, but nothing special, and froze it

Here we are, about two months later, and I heated the frozen curry up
OH MY GOSH!!

Absolutely amazing!!
Had it matured, was it better than I thought?
Goodness knows!

But I ate a bought curry alongside the phaal
The bought curry was from "The Red Chilli", which is a really really good Nottingham takeaway
I reckon the Fleet Phaal was as good
Thanks for the recipe, folks
I'll be doing base and curry again!!
Maybe I just need to cook a few months ahead of when I eat

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