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Messages - KEROUAC1957

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Trainee Chefs / Beginners Questions / Re: Frequently Asked Questions
« on: December 05, 2016, 02:23 PM »
Just a quick question. I've heard a lot of posters on here say that base sauce often resembles and even sometimes tastes like a bland soup. Would I be invoking the wrath of the Curry God if I used Heinz Cream of Chicken with Korma spices as a base?  Would this be doomed to failure?   http://www.tesco.com/groceries/product/details/?id=289622075   

Looking at the ingredients it contains Salt, Tomato Paste, Garlic, Ginger, Coriander, Cumin, Chilli, Paprika, Turmeric, Lemon Juice from Concentrate, Onion Powder, Fenugreek, Black Pepper, Stabilisers - Polyphosphates and Sodium Phosphates.

2
Thanks George and Edwin I'll give those a go.

I also thought I'd try CA's Base and Korma as it looks basic enough for my level.  http://www.curry-recipes.co.uk/curry/index.php/topic,7652.0.html

3
George I'm sure you have a lot more knowledge on these things than me. I found your comment about the curry powder odd because I had asked on another thread "why add more spices when curry powder was already a mix of spices" and I was advised that it adds a lot more depth of flavour which seemed to be the general consensus.

4
Thanks for the replies. I've found them really useful and enlightening. I'm grateful for George for replying but I did find some of your comments odd regarding the spices etc. Also I don't think 500g chicken is a huge quantity for 3 people.

I fried the onions for about 15 mins Sverige so yes I understand it wasn't long enough. I will have to have a go at making a base sauce and then a recipe from on here as you all seem to have a lot of knowledge.  Just out of interest what is the average quantity when you make a base sauce? 1 litre? 2 litres?

5
I've been meaning to post about a little experiment I did based on my task. Thanks for the suggestions. I couldn't follow them though because they required making the base sauce first and I didn't have the time on this occasion (But I want to give it a go with base sauces later).  I ended up finding a recipe and adapting it (probably risky for a beginner I know).

Here's what I did:

Quote
1. Heat 2 tbsp of rape seed oil in a pan and add 1 medium diced onion, fry until soft.
2. Add garlic & ginger paste (= 1 tsp ginger & clove garlic mixed together), add spice mixture**.

 cook for 1-2 minutes.  Add 50ml of water cook until the water has evaporated. Add 200g chopped tomatoes.
3. Add 500g diced chicken, cook until sealed. Add 1 can / 400ml coconut milk, 50ml double cream and 1 tsp sugar or pickle; simmer until the chicken is cooked (approx. 15 minutes).

Add 0.25 tsp garam masala

** For the spice mixture I used an approximation of those suggested on this site:
1 tsp turmeric powder
0.5 tsp madras curry powder

0.5 tsp cumin powder
0.75 tsp coriander powder

0.25 garam masala (add at last stage)

Total = 1 Tbsp

I have to admit although the result wasn't awful it was pretty bland. I wonder if I doubled the spice mix quantities it would have been much better.

Does any of this sound like I went wrong somewhere?

6
Ok I was thinking there's probably enough chilli in the madras powder so I'll try it without adding any more chilli. Thanks

7
On the subject of curry powder I found some Rajah Mild Madras. It might seem an obvious answer but is this really mild as I always associated Madras with being very hot? (My daughter is particularly sensitive to hot curries so I have to be careful)  :)

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Trainee Chefs / Beginners Questions / Cooking in small quantities
« on: March 11, 2016, 11:42 AM »
Hi I've been tasked with cooking a mild/medium chicken curry tonight and I'm wondering if it is possible to find a recipe for cooking a one off small quantity - say for three people? I've been looking through the site and am really impressed with the depth of info but I'm a bit stuck on how to scale down the recipes which mainly seem to be for cooking large quantities.

I realise I'm not going to be able do great things over night but was trying to find something to ease me in gradually. PS I've got to go for something fairly mild as my daughter is not keen on anything too hot.

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Thanks for the replies. I think I understand a bit more now. One other thing. With curry powder does it mean bog standard "curry powder" from the supermarket?

10
Hi I am a complete beginner so sorry if it's a naive question. Something confusing me at the moment is this. I understand there are various combinations of the main spices which you can use to create a mix powder but sometimes included in those mixes are also garam masala and curry powder. I thought that garam masala and curry powder were themselves spice mixes which already contain some of the main spices. So it seems like you add some of the ingredients two or three times?

So I suppose what I'm trying to understand is what is the main difference between a mixture of the main spices and garam masala and curry powder (which I think are both a mixture of spices). Perhaps I'm over thinking this.  :)

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