Are you with me so far? I should probably be asking are you still interested!
Next up, more elements for you to make and freeze – not necessarily quickly – but you'll be really pleased with the results when you can assemble delicious home-made meals – fast.
Who doesn't love a curry – everyone needs a curry sauce in their culinary library – here's mine:
Chip Shop Curry Sauce
50g unsalted butter
2 large onions, finely sliced and chopped
1 tsp of ginger paste
4 roasted garlic cloves
3 tbsp mild curry powder
3 tbsp malt vinegar
½ tsp star anise powder
500ml of the slow cooked star anise chicken stock
2 tbsp slaked cornflour
2 tbsp lemon juice
160ml coconut cream
Using a large saucepan melt the butter and add the onions, garlic and ginger. Fry gently until soft – about 15 minutes, make sure there's no colour. Add the curry powder, star anise powder and vinegar, fry for another minute. Add the chicken stock, bring to the boil and simmer gently for 25 minutes, stir occasionally, you don't want it to stick.
Add two tbsp of water to the cornflour, mix and pour into the sauce. Simmer for another 5 minutes, stir until you've got a silky, thickened sauce. Blitz with a hand blender until smooth, add the lemon juice.
You will get approximately 630g of thick curry sauce - I'd divide in half - 315g into two boxes and deposit in the treasure chest!
The sauce freezes well and I'd suggest you might want to do so in portions you know will suit you best. Remember, you can always take out more than one box, infinitely better than wasting part of a larger one.
Defrost the sauce in the fridge, then tip into a medium saucepan and warm it through. If you want to loosen the thickness but enrich the sauce add 160ml of coconut cream and stir until thoroughly absorbed.
It's difficult to get the right balance of “heat” and “spice” in a curry sauce and inevitably you can't please everyone. Chip shop curry is not as strong as traditional curries. To give you an idea of “heat” and “spice” I'd say it's not as hot and spicy as a rendang and not as mild as a korma, so middle for diddle, suitable for everyone.
Clearly this curry sauce takes time – I can only say that it's definitely worth the effort!
By the way, you don't have to use the anise chicken stock, ordinary chicken stock is fine or vegetable stock if you want a veggie version.
Next … what to do with a lump of leftover roast beef
No comments:
Post a Comment