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Messages - schweiky

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1
Traditional Indian Recipes / Re: Gosht Salan
« on: May 03, 2008, 11:30 AM »
I made this last night.  It was great!  Thanks a lot for a very simple but delicious recipe!

Schweik ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D

2
Pictures of Your Curries / Re: Chicken tikka and naan
« on: December 12, 2007, 06:38 PM »
i got the skewers from ebay - this one

http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/LANDMANN-DE-LUXE-KEBAB-SKEWERS-PACK-OF-4-0243-BARBECUE_W0QQitemZ190181164532QQihZ009QQcategoryZ20723QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem

and yeah mint jelly from supermarket

Thanks a lot.  I will try your recipe out. ;D ;D ;D ;D
Schweik

3
Pictures of Your Curries / Re: Chicken tikka and naan
« on: December 06, 2007, 07:38 PM »
Your cooker looks superb as does your food.  A couple of questions if you ahve time:

Where did you get those skewers from please?

Where do you get mint jelly from?  The supermarket?

Nb I swear by the Madhur Jafrey recipe in Flavours of India which is absolutely immense.

Thanks
Schweik

4
Traditional Indian Recipes / Re: Amritsari Tandoori Chicken
« on: November 28, 2007, 07:43 PM »
I have made this recipe three times in the last two weeks.   It is absolutely amazing.   I have used it with lamb and chicken and it is FAR SUPERIOR to any other that I have tried. Funnily enough I have had the recipe for years but never used it because I didn't have anywhere to buy the brown cardomoms from or the wherewithal make the chaat masala.  Now I do, and I would heartily recommend this recipe to anyone because  it's beautiful.  I am working on transforming this into tandoori tikka masala.  I will get back to you, which is British not Indian but TASTES GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD. ;D ;D ;D ;D
Schweiky ;D

5
House Specialities / Re: Lamb or Chicken Karahi
« on: November 10, 2007, 07:28 PM »
I don't know for sure as I haven't tried the recipe but isn't it a bit weird that the spices haven't been roasted or fried (esp. cumin coriander) before being  added to the liquid?
Schweiky ???

6
Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Re: Hi,
« on: November 06, 2007, 02:07 PM »
Ok, I will make it, take some photos and paste the recipe alongside some time soon. ;D
schweik

7
Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Re: Hi,
« on: November 05, 2007, 10:14 PM »
I have posted the lamb recipe for you if you are interested in the authentic section.  I have another which I made up/adapted from two other recipes.  It is a lot cheaper as it only involves a chicken but it is quite complex.  You wouldn't find it in an indian restaurant but is probably one of the best things I've ever eaten.  Again, it's a banquet dish and look superb.  Want me to post?
Schweik

8
Traditional Indian Recipes / Mughlai-style Leg of Lamb
« on: November 05, 2007, 07:50 PM »
Ok, here goes.  Although I have a golden rule that I never change a recipe from a book the first time I do it, I DID change this recipe the first time I did it.  I will explain the differences and you can go at it the way you think is best.  This recipe is for a 1.kg or 4lb leg of lamb and it is  really worth doing for a dinner party/special occasion as it looks the dog's bollocks when you pull it out of the oven.  For those with the book, this is from the Best Ever Indian Cookery book which is mentioned elsewhere in this section.
Ingredients
4 large onions chopped
4 garlic cloves (I used 6)
5cm piece of ginger
3 tbsp ground almonds  ( I did the recipe without as I had one guest with nut allergy!)
2 tsp ground cumin
2 tsp ground coriander
2 tsp ground turmeric
2 tsp garam masala
4 - 6 fresh green chillis ( I used 2 green and 2 red seeded)
juices of 1 lemon
300 ml plain natural yoghurt (beaten)
4 lb leg of lamb
8 - 10 cloves ( I did not use these as my wife doesn't like them that much and I was marinating..more of this later)
1 tbsp of flaked almonds (i did not use these but a handful of chopped coriander instead)
4 firm tomatoes halved and grilled to serve

Method
Place the onions, garlic ginger, ground almonds, dry spices, chillis and lemon juice in a blender.  Add salt to taste and make a smooth paste.  Gradually add the yoghurt with a fork and then blend briefly.  Grease a large deep roasting pan.  Remove all/most of the visible fat from the lamb then make diagonal gashes on both sides Push the cloves into the meat spacing evenly on all sides   Place the meat in the pan and cover.  Roast at gas mark 5 for 2 - 2 and a half hours.  remove the foil for the last ten minutes so it crusts up.  Take it out of the oven and garnish with the almonds and tomatos (or in my version the tomatos and coriander).

I changed the recipe by not slashing meat and simply marinating the lamb for twenty four hours with the mixture rubbed lovingly all over it, and stirring and repasting whenever I remembered to do it.  I didn't want to slash the meat as I read that that is a sure way to lose the juices, but I still wanted it to taste aromatic.  I think as long as you keep pushing the meat into all of the natural recesses it offers, you will find the results are just as good, or better as the meat is juicier.  I also cooked it a lower temperature (gas mark 4) for about two and a half hours or just a bit over.  I don't like my lamb over cooked and prefer to cook it more slowly.

However you do it, you won't regret it as it is delicious!
Enjoy
Schweiky



9
Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Re: Hi,
« on: November 05, 2007, 12:04 AM »
Well, the banquet went very well but not at all as I'd planned.  There were less people and I ended up being given a beautiful fresh whole leg of lamb the day before so decided to do that roasted Muglai style (spicy marinade with cloves and almonds)..it was just too nice to cube into a curry.  It was fantastic (if I say so myself)and I was relieved as hell as I hadn't already tried it.  To go with it I did a spicy mashed potato (which was very popular and disappeared in around five minutes although i didn't rate it myself), the beetroot rice (very nice), the mushrooms (excellent..garlic, chilli, ricotta cheese and mint and coriander), a tomato and onion dish with spices and coriander and mango for dessert!  Thanks for the suggestion!  I didn't take any photos but I will next time.  I wish I had because the lamb looked something else when it came out of the oven with a kind of spicy crust and loads of toasted marinade around the bottom of the pan!  Wow..what a centrepiece.  It would make a great celebration (Xmas etc) meal if anyone is interested I can put the recipe down for you.
Then the next day I cooked for my parents and made a karahi lamb, tandoori chicken and used the left over veg!  I was bloody knackered!
Anyway, thanks for the ideas. ;D

10
Just Joined? Introduce Yourself / Re: Hi,
« on: November 02, 2007, 12:27 PM »
Hi
I have just joined too.  What a great site!  I was intrigued by the UCB and made the one which came with a set of balti pans ( as it looked the easiest) straight away.  I had some very good results by following the recipe given for chicken madras. I will try the Darthphall one asap.
I use a lot of authentic Indian recipes too, and in fact am going to be cooking up a big dinner for eight friends tomorrow night with the following mixture:
Chicken Tikka (starter)
Main
Beef and Mushroom curry (Madhur Jaffrey)
Lamb Madras (Tamil Nadu style)(cookery book)
Balti Chicken
Mushrooms with yoghurt and spices (recipe book - very good recipe already tried)
Spicy chips (recipe book)
Beetroot rice
Sag Bajhi
Dessert?  Who knows?  Not my speciality!
I will let you know how it goes!
Schweiky ;D ;D ;D ;D


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