wagoneer
Well-known member
If you help me learn about cooking Indian/Pakastani style curry. I will bring on the ingredients, spices and such. I have a basic knowledge.
wagoneer said:If you help me learn about cooking Indian/Pakastani style curry. I will bring on the ingredients, spices and such. I have a basic knowledge.
John61CT said:More advanced article but interesting background about Bengalis
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/world-asia-india-44681034
John61CT said:There are thousands of different curries, both mixed blends and from scratch, from many hundreds of different tribes and ethnic groups across dozens of countries
Recipes all over the web, I have no idea what's stopping you.
But here's a basic start, assuming you're not vegetarian and have a basic curry mix hispanic / jamaican / or US version of "Indian" curry.
Supermarkets these days have jars of liquid pre-made gravy, some with dry as well, Aldi's are really good.
Basically just like making taco meat or chilli.
Cook your pot of rice and / or have your flatbread ready, wheat flour tortillas will do.
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Chop up your animal flesh and fry it up nice and brown, in oil if not fatty meat.
Add some diced potatoes if you're stretching the meat budget, pre-cooked is fine at the end, or just cook the stew longer if they start raw.
With plenty of black pepper, some red chili / cayenne too if you like spicy. Toss in chopped onions maybe crushed garlic too, keep stirring, then turn it down to a simmer.
Toss in the dry mix / curry powder, maybe a tablespoon per half pound of meat, to taste really.
If the mix has ginger, great to add more, ideally fresh.
If you got a jar style, add the gravy part maybe 5min after you've been frying up the dry spices.
Coriander seed ground up fresh with a pepper mill adds some fresh zing.
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Advanced:
Some styles use tomatoes, some coconut based, basically read the ingredients and add more / fresher versions of whatever's already in there.
Read from-scratch recipes, visit your local Asian groceries for the individual spices, experiment!
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Add-on's:
Veggies are often great in the stew, or serve them on the side for contrast.
At least some sliced cucumber or crunchy greens.
A bit of mango chutney, or yogurt with some mint on the side makes it extra special.
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Serve:
Eat with lots of rice, or scoop up with the flatbread.
Handing out rollups to the crowd works without dishes (think tacos), a bit of rice to soak up the gravy and stretch the filling out, a couple pounds of meat can fill up thirty hungry campers.
Juice or lemon water to drink.
As you get used to spicy crank it up, fry fresh chopped chilis up with the meat from the beginning, great headrush of endorphins.
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