T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2773.23 | Vindaloo | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Mon Oct 15 1990 05:17 | 99 |
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This is the tale of a pursuit of a taste - the half remembered taste of
Vindaloo in Goa 25 years ago...
I started with a recipe from my mother - she collects recipe books, I rather
fancy, and she turned up a "simple Vindaloo". This calls for a marinade
consisting of:-
6 small fresh red chillies, seeded,
2 cloves of garlic, crushed,
1 cup brown vinegar,
1 T chopped fresh ginger,
1 t cumin seeds,
1 t coriander seeds,
1/2 t cardamom seeds,
1 t fenugreek seeds,
1 t ground turmeric,
1 T sugar
(where 't' => teaspoon = 5 ml and 'T' => tablespoon = 15 ml, and a cup
is 8 fluid ounces)
These are then blended in a liquidiser, and 2 pounds of chicken are
marinated overnight, then pan fried in ghee, then poached in the
marinade for 30 minutes.
I tried this: as expected it was not at all hot. Further it was too
sour - probably in balance with the lack of 'hot'.
My wife and I then sat down to think up what to do about it, and made
several decisions:
Firstly spices get their best taste when lightly cooked first - this
'raw spice' marinade is just a little too simple for its own good.
Secondly though overnight marination is needed for the chicken to adsorb
the flavours of the spices, it is probably too long for the vinegar -
the meat is almost pickled!
We looked to our cabinets and found two Thai ingredients that we
decided to use. The first is a paste called Prik Pao (pronounced
'pow'), that is mainly chilli and garlic, with shrimp paste, and
tamarind. This is cooked and matured to maximise the taste (though we
do sometimes make our own, I must admit that mainly we use commercially
available paste). The second 'ingredient' is a standard Thai condiment -
thinly sliced chillis pickled in vinegar.
Note that tamarind is sour - it reduces the quantity of vinegar needed.
This then is our modified recipe - since it isn't a true Vindaloo
anymore, we call it:
"K-P's poultry dinner"
First the marinade (phase 1)
12 red chillis, thinly sliced (but not deseeded, nor deveined)
4 cloves of garlic, crushed,
1 cup fresh chicken stock (not from stock cubes - the real stuff)
2 T chopped fresh ginger,
1 t cumin seeds,
1 t coriander seeds,
3 cardomom seeds,
1 t fenugreek seeds,
1/4 t turmeric,
1 T sugar,
3 T prik pao.
All the ingredients except the fresh chillis are then blended in a
liquidiser, and the sliced chillis added. 2 lb of chicken are then
marinaded overnight (in our case for 18 hours).
Then 2 tablespoons of chillis in vinegar are strained, and the vinegar
added to the marinade for 3 hours immediately prior to cooking.
Then the pieces of chicken are pan fried in ghee, or cooking oil to
which an ounce of butter has been added, and put aside for a moment.
The marinade is put in a sauce pan and brought to a simmer, and 2
teaspoons of fresh ground chilli powder (we roast our own chillis to
make this truly fresh - if you can only get store bought chilli powder
use 3 teaspoons) is added, and blended in. The chicken pieces are then
added, and on very low heat the mixture is simmered, covered, for
twenty minutes.
A large potatoe is peeled and either parboiled, or more simply roughly
cubed, and 'zapped' in a microwave oven for 1 minute on high power. The
potatoe is added to the simmering mixture and cooked for a further 10
minutes. The drained, pickled chillis are now added, and the mixture
turned to high heat for 1 minute to complete cooking.
Serve with white rice.
/. Ian .\
(Serves 2 - I consider this to be a fairly mild dish, but ... :-)
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2773.1 | try BLKPUD::CURRIES | PENUTS::DUDLEY | | Mon Dec 03 1990 11:51 | 1 |
|
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2773.2 | Steve's ad-hoc chicken vindaloo | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Tue Dec 04 1990 10:16 | 29 |
| I created a "vindaloo" recipe one night after buying a jar of
vindaloo paste at an Indian/Asian grocery store and not knowing what to
do with it. It's very easy, and my wife has cravings for it at least
once a week now. Here's what you need:
~1 lb chicken cut into cubes
1 large yellow onion chopped
black pepper to taste
white pepper to taste
paprika
1-2 cloves garlic
2 tsp vindaloo paste
1 cup chicken broth
2-3 Tb butter or marg.
vegetable oil
In a heavy skillet or wok, heat vegetable oil (quarter to half an
inch deep) until hot. Then add chicken and stir-fry until it changes
color but isn't completely cooked. Removed chicken with a slotted spoon
and drain on paper towels for later. Dump out the oil. Add butter or
marg. and heat on medium heat. Add onion, black pepper, white pepper,
paprika, and garlic and saute until the onion is limp. Add more butter
if it appears to dry out. Then add vindaloo paste and mix well,
stir-frying for another minute. Pour in the chicken broth and stir it
around. Add the chicken and simmer over medium heat for 10-15 minutes
until it reduces to a thick sauce. Serve with some good white rice.
Even with just 2 tsps of vindaloo paste, it'll be pretty hot (hot
enough for most people).
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2773.3 | Yes, potatoes!! | CARTUN::MANDALINCI | | Wed Dec 19 1990 15:26 | 5 |
| After spending a year in England where INdian restaurants abound, I'm a
vindaloo fanatic!!! I have always had vindaloo with potatoes in it and
well as pieces of fresh tomatoes. The potatoe idea was right.
Sorry, no recipes.
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2773.4 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Jan 03 1991 05:04 | 14 |
|
as an aside "vin" is a corruption of the French word viande (sp?)
meaning meat, and aloo is from an Indian word meaning potatoe. The dish
was developed in and around Goa and is the result of cultural mixing
between the Indians and the European spice merchants. Literally I guess
it applies to any Indian style "meat and potatoes" dish.
Potatoe (or any starchy equivalent such as rice) acts as a "spice
moderator" to reduce the perceived heat of the dish.
as for a recipe - if I ever get straight from my recent office move
I've got one somewhere...
/. Ian .\
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2773.5 | Patak's | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Wed Jan 23 1991 02:37 | 14 |
| The paste referred to in (.-2) may very well be Patak's Vindaloo Paste
which comes in about a 16 oz. jar, in two strengths: Mild and Hot.
Joyce Chen's in Acton stocks these (on shelves in the, um, Northwest
corner near the freezer cases), and here in New York City you can
get them pretty much in every neighborhood grocery, Korean Fruit Stand,
Indian Market, etc. These save a lot of time, and I certify that the
Hot variety is lightning hot if you use more than the amount indicated.
Patak's is out of England, somewhere, and God Bless 'Em, I use a lot
of their products (try the Biriayni Paste, Tikka Paste, and especially
the Lime Pickles [Achar]. Yee Hah!)
Max
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2773.6 | They'll put a bounce in your step | CSCOAC::ANDERSON_M | Dwell in possibility | Wed Jan 23 1991 12:17 | 2 |
|
Patak's Lime Pickles are wonderful.
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2773.7 | Pork Vindaloo -- Unusual Recipe, no potatoes(aloo) | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Thu Jan 24 1991 20:16 | 42 |
| Shikar ka Vindaloo - Pork Vindaloo
4lb Pork (boned)
8oz Ghee or cooking oil
4 hot green chiles
4 hot red chiles
8 cloves garlic
4 tbs ground coriander
2 tbs ground cumin
4 tsp black pepper
2 tsp ground tumeric
4 bay leaves
10 cloves
10 cardamons
4 tbs vinegar
2 lemons
2 large onions
4" fresh ginger
1.5 pints of boiling water
2 tbs garam masala
4 tsp salt
Trim away any excess fat from the pork. Cut the pork into 1" cubes. Heat the
ghee or oil in a heavy sauce pan and gently fry the pork until it is sealed on
all sides. Lift it out with a slotted spoon and put to one side.
Now make the vindaloo paste. Roast the bay leaves and cloves on a baking tray
in a hot oven preheated to 400 degrees for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, top and tail
the green and red chiles and peel the garlic. Mince together the chiles and
garlic and grind them together with the coriander, cumin, black pepper, and
tumeric. Remove the seeds from the cardamon and grind together with the cloves
and bay leaves. Mix them into the garlic and spice paste and add the vinegar.
Squeeze in the juice from the lemons. Mix this paste with the pork cubes.
Reheat the remaining ghee or oil in the heavy sauce pan. Peel and thinly
slice the onion and fry it until it is just beginning to soften. Peel and
thinly slice the ginger, add it to the sauce pan, and fry it for two minutes.
Add the pork and fry it for another five minutes. Pour in the boiling water,
bring to a boil, and simmer for 40 minutes with the sauce pan tightly covered.
Then add in the garam masala and the salt and simmer for another 10-15 minutes
until the pork is tender.
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2773.8 | Call me lazy, but... | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Jan 25 1991 09:36 | 3 |
| If I wanted to be a lazy slob and substitute Patak's hot vindaloo
curry paste for the "scratch" ingredients in (.-1), how much would I
need? I'm guessing 2-3 tsp. That sound close?
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2773.9 | I didn't like my results from being lazy | CSSE32::RHINE | A dirty mind is a terrible thing to waste | Fri Jan 25 1991 18:33 | 2 |
| I have found that Patak's vindaloo paste just doesn't give the right
flavor. The recipe that I posted really isn't that much work.
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2773.10 | Vindaloo continued | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Sat Aug 08 1992 00:51 | 15 |
| Sorry for the 18 month delay in responding. The label recommends 2
tablespoons, and I use three. I've found mild, hot and very hot
varieties available. The "hot" should just about do it - I have found
that I can't hack the "very hot", and I LIKE hot food.
Jack Rhine has posted the "from scratch" edition, and I intend to try
it on a weekend. But if you want vindaloo in a hurry, Patak's is the
way to go. I have nothing but admiration for Jack's culinary ability,
but I have to disagree with his opinion of the result - I can't tell
the difference between the Patak preparation and the restaurant dishes
found here in NYC on East 6th Street between 1st and 2nd Avenues:
Little India.
Maybe they're cutting corners and using Patak's in the kitchen :-)
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2773.11 | Tindaloo Anyone??? | TANG::RHINE | | Sun Aug 09 1992 12:54 | 5 |
| Mark, I let you know next time I am in New York and we can visit
Little India!! It has been a long time!!
Now does anyone have a Tindaloo recipe. Tindaloo makes vindaloo seem
mild.
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2773.12 | | MANTHN::EDD | Dead ants are happy ants... | Tue Aug 11 1992 08:50 | 14 |
| Quite ironically, I've got homemade chicken vindaloo sitting in the
refrigerator here at MRO2, just waiting to be nuked at lunch.
When I make it I use an onion to add some body to the vindaloo paste.
I've found most recipes to be overly vinegared, having learned that
about 1/2 cup is plenty. (The vindaloo at Sweetheart in Worcester is
my baseline.)
As for heat, I'm kind of, um, masochistic. The batch sitting in the
refrigerator started off with 150 thai peppers.... serves 4.
I can post my recipe later if anyone would like it.
Edd
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2773.13 | | ADSERV::PW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Tue Aug 11 1992 14:48 | 3 |
| With 150 thai peppers in it, you have to refrigerate the stuff?
--PSW :-)
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2773.14 | | MANTHN::EDD | Hotter!....HOTTER! | Tue Aug 11 1992 15:01 | 9 |
| > With 150 thai peppers in it, you have to refrigerate the stuff?
Yeah, but micro-waving it does seem kind of redundant...;^)
Maybe my taste buds are shot, but it just doesn't seem that hot. I
suppose it could be the thais losing some of their potency in the
freezer. (No problem, I've got 100+ plants in the backyard...)
Edd
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2773.15 | hot stuff! | DECLNE::TOWLE | | Tue Aug 11 1992 17:00 | 3 |
| Yeah, but I bet the setting on the thermostat in the refrig has to
be increased everytime that stuff is put in it?!
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2773.16 | NIMIS CAPSICVM | SNOC02::MASCALL | "Tiddley quid?" dixit Porcellus. | Tue Aug 11 1992 20:35 | 14 |
| I asked in the Latin notesfile how to translate the motto
"Chilli to Excess".
Here, Edd, I think you need it more.
;^) ;^) ;^)
Sheridan
:^)
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2773.17 | | MANTHN::EDD | Hotter!....HOTTER! | Wed Aug 12 1992 08:42 | 13 |
| As hot as mine is, it's still not up to Sweetheart's...
At most places I've eaten vindaloo (most recently Taj of India) the
phrase "make it VERY hot" parses to "throw in a second chili". At
Sweetheart, the cook and I have the same interpretation.
Edd
PS - Is the "V" in "CAPSICVM" really a V, or shoudl it be Anglicized
to "U"?
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2773.18 | When I was a wee lad... | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Aug 17 1992 13:43 | 4 |
| In [one of] the era[s] of the Roman Empire, U and V were the same
letter which ultimately evolved into two letters.
ed
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2773.19 | Please post your recipe .. | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Java-Man | Mon Aug 17 1992 14:23 | 6 |
|
So Edd, if you're waiting for someone to ask you to post your Vindaloo
recipe, I'm asking ..... ^)
Larry
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2773.20 | As requested... | MANTHN::EDD | Nimis capsicum | Mon Aug 17 1992 18:53 | 44 |
| This recipe is adapted from one by Madhur Jaffrey. She uses less vinegar
than I, and only recommends 2-3 chilis. (Ha!)
It's not quite what I get at Sweetheart, but I find it delicious...
Edd
Vindaloo
2 tsp whole cumin seeds
1 tsp black peppercorns
1 tsp cardamon seeds (seeds, not pods!)
3" cinnamon
2 tsp whole black mustard seed
1 tsp fenugreek seed
1/4 c white wine vingar
2 tsp salt
1.5 tsp brown sugar
1 large onion, peeled and sliced
1.5 c water
1" chopped fresh ginger
1 whole clove garlic, peeled
1 TBL coriander seed
1 tsp turmeric
chili pepper to taste (I don't suggest novices try 150 thais!)
1/4 c oil
1 lb chicken breast cut in 1" cubes (Or fish, shrimp, lamb...)
2-3 potatoes cut in 1" cubes
1 tsp saffron threads if the letters TFSO mean nothing to you.
Grind cumin, chilis, peppercorns, cardamom, cinnamon, mustard and fenugreek.
Add vinegar salt and sugar.
Fry onions until clear, just turning brown. Remove from heat and place in
blender with a spash of water. Puree. Add vinegar/spice mixture and remaining
spices.
Add chicken, potatoes and enough water to cover. When chicken appears white
on outside, add spice mixture. Cover and simmer. Watch carefully, you want
to let some of the fluids boil away but not dry. Should take about an hour
until the potatoes are cooked.
Edd
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2773.21 | I gotta ask ... | SNOC02::MASCALL | "Tiddley quid?" dixit Porcellus. | Mon Aug 17 1992 20:34 | 6 |
| TFSO??????
Sheridan
:^)
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2773.22 | | MANTHN::EDD | Nimis capsicum | Tue Aug 18 1992 06:29 | 4 |
| Saffron is BIG bux. Not the type of thing one buys if their future
financial picture is "iffy"...
Edd
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