Although this is used as a very popular “side” it can morph
into a stand-alone veggie meal by adding a selection of other stuff
– cauliflower and chick peas to name but two!
Back to the recipe – for those of you who follow the blog you'll
know I always have baked, jacket spuds in my fridge, so you could use
two of them.
Bombay
Aloo – aka Bombay Potatoes
2
large jacket spuds from your stash, peeled if you prefer
OR
500g
of cooked potatoes – I use Charlottes – whatever you use it
should be a waxy potato that holds its shape, so any new potato will
be just the job
1
medium onion, finely diced
1
tbsp rapeseed oil
250g
passata
1
tbsp tomato paste
1
tsp caster sugar
1
tsp ginger paste or 1” fresh, grated.
2
cloves of roasted garlic or 2 cloves of fresh, crushed
1
tsp each of ground cumin, coriander, garam masala and curry powder.
Use a curry powder that best suits your palate and how much heat you
like – mild, medium or hot
1
tsp salt or to taste
Use a
medium size saucepan (21cms/8”).
Your
potatoes should be cut to approximately 6-12 cms/¼” to ½”
pieces.
Fry
the onions in the oil until soft – 3-4 minutes. Add the ginger,
garlic, spices and salt. Fry so that the spices are released. Add
the potatoes and the tomato paste, fry gently so that the potatoes
absorb the flavours and the paste cooks too – 3-4 minutes.
Add
the passata and sugar and cook on a gentle heat for 10 minutes**.
Taste the Bombay Aloo, adjust salt and sugar to personal taste.
Cool, box and fridge. The longer you leave this dish the better it
will be. It freezes well.
As a guide this recipe will give you 690g of scrumptious Bombay
Aloo.
You can add a can of chick peas, drained and rinsed or tiny
florets of cauliflower with the passata and sugar marked ** above -
or anything that takes your fancy!
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