Colourful curries

Curry Garden, Blackheath, SE3

There’s a decent buzz in Curry Garden despite the doors just opening up on this smallish Indian on  a weekday night. In a village that has a glut of Indian and Nepalese restaurants you need an angle to stand out. And the Curry Garden’s angle is to offer a series of colour coded meal deals offering popadoms, chutneys, main meal (your choice of chicken, lamb or prawns), veg side dish, rice and nan.

There are 16 of these meal deals, using colours to make things simple for us poor customers befuddled by too many choices. So all you have to do is cast your eye over the options and choose the Red deal, the Blue deal, the Pink deal and so on. The idea, I am told, is to not only to keep things simple but also to offer good value to customers who have less in their pockets these days (please insert your favourite thing to blame here: banks, Brown, Cameron, the ultra rich, unions, the hole in your pocket).

Luckily £12.95 was still in my pocket so I could go for the Prawn Jalfrezi, Sag Paneer, Mushroom Pillau and Chilli nan. This is the Beguni meal deal. Now, you might be thinking, that’s not a colour. Ah, but it is (it’s Bengali for purple). With so many meal deals I just assume the creators of the idea ran out of colours?

The deals start at £10.95 (eg. Lamb Madras, Bombay Aloo, Pillau rice, plain nan) and is cheaper than if you order the same items separately. Swapping of items, within reason, is allowed. But what’s the point of that? At these prices just play Curry Roulette and call out a colour without even looking at the menu I say.

Curry Garden, 72 Tranquil Vale, Blackheath, London, SE3 0BN. Tel: 020 8852 3267/1401. Open: Mon–Sat 5.30pm-midnight, Sun noon-midnight.

Curry Garden snapshot

Food ① ② ③

Decor ① ② ③

Value ① ② ③ ④

Atmosphere (early on Wednesday night) ① ② ③

Service and friendliness ① ② ③

Curry Garden Tandoori on Urbanspoon

Quick and easy

Mehak, Greenwich

Is it me or is up selling in Indian restaurants getting worse?

“Popadoms sir?”
“Not really.”
“Starter sir?”
“No, I’m not that hungry.”
“Vegetable side dish sir?”
“No, I’m okay thanks.”
“Dessert sir?”
“Just the bill thanks.”

How many times have you been in that position in a curry house (often with dirty looks from the waiter)? Or worse still, how many times have you been pushed into ordering an extra dish you probably don’t even want? Sadly it happens, and while I have sympathy with the restaurants who have to make a living, what’s wrong with letting customers pop in for quick and easy curry sometimes (assuming we don’t hog the best table on a Saturday night of course).

So a round of applause to one of Greenwich’s less mentioned curry houses: Mehak. There’s a time and a place for a feast, but one Friday night I just fancied a quick curry. Chicken Vindaloo (£4.40), Pilau Rice (£1.80), Chapati (£1.10) and a large bottle of Cobra (£4.40). No problem. I get my curry fix and I’m in and out of this smart restaurant pretty quickly with a cost of just £12.30 (the other 60p was for the lime pickle).

I was impressed with the food (it’s hard to impress with a basic dish but the Vindy was hot with a thick, dark sauce) and I was impressed with the service. So I’ll be back when it’s time for a feast, probably to taste the sweet and spicy Rista Masalla (£6.50) which is chicken breasts stuffed with mince.

Mehak, 160 Trafalgar Road, Greenwich, Se10 9TZ. Tel: 020 8858 0227 or 020 8293 4752. Open: Mon–Sat 6pm-11.30pm, Sun noon-11pm

Mehak snapshot

Food ① ② ③

Decor ① ② ③

Value ① ② ③ ④

Atmosphere (early on Friday night) ① ② ③

Service and friendliness ① ② ③ ④

Mehak on Urbanspoon

January curry column

If you like curry you’ll love the new curry column in the Greenwich Visitor. News on Curry Garden in Blackheath, Shampan 3 in Welling, whisky and curry pairings, the best curry book of the year and turkey curry. Many thanks to the column’s sponsor, The Mitre Hotel.

Curry tip of the week 10

Beer is great with curry, don’t get me wrong. But the spicy notes in whisky makes it an ideal drink to accompany Indian food. Don’t be afraid to experiment (and add water to your whisky to release the flavours) but for a starter for 10 try Johnnie Walker Red with Onion Bhajis.

Tenerife’s Best Curry Part Two (hurrah)

Bombay Babu, Tenerife

Part One of the search for Tenerife’s Best Curry was a tad disappointing to say the least. So hip, hip, hurrah for Bombay Babu (part two) which was the original choice for part one if only we could have found it through the car park, along the alleyway, down the steps etc. But after a couple of days in Tenerife it ain’t so tough to find. And thank goodness for that.

Chirpy chap waiter from Gillingham will keep you amused even if you don’t like the earthy decor with whicker-style chairs and sharp white linen against brown tables with a backdrop of pics of famous Indian sites such as the Mumbai’s Gateway of India.

But forget Gillingham waiters and decor discussion because the Punjabi chef knows his stuff. Herein, through the car park, along the alleyway and down the steps etc lies the greatest Bombay Aloo (€5 plus tax) you are likely to taste. How’s he do it I know not; after all, how can a bit of pepper, tomato and spice added to a few chunks of potato be that different to thousands of other? But, it can. Taste this Bombay Potato please.

The Chicken Dhansak (€8.50 plus tax), Lamb Madras (€8 plus tax) and Mushroom rice (€4 plus tax) were top draw as was the Dhal Mukhni (€5.90 plus tax) the current favourite of lentils with garlic, ginger and coriander and butter, with which the chef shared some ‘how to do it properly’ secrets.

Stupidly I never asked how he did that potato.

Bombay Babu, CC La Niña, Planta 3 Local 62, Torviscas Playa Costa Adeje, Tenerife. Tel: +34 922 719 463. Open: Tues–Sun 2pm-midnight.

Bombay Babu snapshot

Food ① ② ③ ④

Decor ① ② ③ ④

Value ① ② ③

Atmosphere (Wednesday night) ① ② ③

Service and friendliness ① ② ③ ④

How to make perfect rotis

Makes approx 12 rotis

Ingredients
• Wholewheat flour (chapati flour) – 2 cups
• Salt – 1/2 tsp (optional)
• Oil – 4 tsp
• Warm water – 3/4 cup
• All-purpose flour – for rolling and dusting

Method
1. In a large mixing bowl, mix Chapati Flour and Salt well.

2. Add Oil and mix until all lumps are gone

3. Add Warm Water a little at a time to form a medium soft dough ball. Do not overwork the dough.

4. Add few drops of Oil and coat the dough ball. Cover and let it rest for 15 minutes.

5. Heat Tawa or skillet on medium heat.

6. Knead the dough once and divide into golf ball size balls.

7. Dip one ball into the All-purpose flour to coat and roll it out into a thin disc. Keep dipping the roti into the dry flour to prevent it from sticking to the rolling surface.

8. Shake or rub off excess flour from the roti and place it onto the hot girdle pan (tawa).

9. Flip to the other side once you see bubbles appear on the surface. Allow it to cook for 10-15 seconds.

10. Increase the stove heat to High, gently pick the roti up with tongs, remove the tawa off of the flame, flip the roti over and place onto an open flame.

11. The roti should balloon up. Flip it over and cook on the other side.

12. Place the cooked roti into an insulated container and smear it with Ghee or clarified butter and repeat the process for the remaining dough.

Recipe courtesy of Indian Tiffin. Click here for a 15 per cent discount on online orders including roti-making kits.

Curry tip of the week 9

You can’t enjoy that curry with a toothache now, can you? Chew on a clove to alleviate the pain. Right, now get to the dentist to sort it out properly…

Recipe… Kashmiri Rogan Josh

Rogan Josh Kashmiri by Purabi Naha 1

Just like Biryani, this is another royal Indian dish, believed to be introduced in India by the Mughals. In Persian, the word “Rogan Josh” means something which is boiling, hot and red in colour. Rogan Josh is a signature dish in Kashmiri (Wazwani) cuisine and probably, one of the finest meat dishes in India.

Kashmir takes its cuisine very seriously. In fact, I have heard many Kashmiris saying that they regard cooking as a form of art and it is almost like their second religion.

Rogan Josh: Nuances in the Making
The authentic Kashmiri cooks (called wazas) have perfected signature Kashmiri dishes, such as Rogan Josh, with their skills and experience. For them, Rogan Josh is not just a dish, but an extension of their culinary skills in its epitome!

· The oil to be used in making an authentic Rogan Josh is mustard oil. You can replace mustard oil with a mixture of plain oil and ghee if mustard oil is not available.
· Use the freshest and best-quality mutton (meat of a male goat) for this dish. The shank or the shoulder of a male goat have the most succulent meat and are preferred highly in many Indian mutton preparations. The size of the meat pieces should be medium (chopped roughly into two-inch-sized pieces), so that the flavours percolate down the meat very well. Mutton can be replaced with lamb meat. Please note that the meat is never marinated in the traditional Rogan Josh preparation.
· Tomatoes should not be used to prepare Rogan Josh. The rich red colour is from the addition of an indispensable ingredient in this authentic Wazwani (Kashmiri) dish: Kashmiri red chilli powder, which imparts a gorgeous red colour and is mildly hot compared to other red chilli powder varieties. To reduce the hotness even further and still get the same, rich colour in your Rogan Josh, you can mix equal quantities of Kashmiri red chilli powder and paprika.
· The Hindus of Kashmir do not use any onion or garlic in this dish, but use yogurt or curd, fennel powder and asafoetida to impart richness. For the same curry, the Kashmiri Muslims, however, use onions and a special ingredient called maval/mawal, described next.

· An ingredient called rattan jyot/ratan jot ormaval/mawal, which is actually dried cockscomb flower, is traditionally added to the dish (for its deep red colour) at the end by boiling it with equal quantity of water. In addition, saffron dissolved in a little milk is added to give it a subtle enrichment in its flavour. But don’t worry if you don’t get these ingredients: your Rogan Josh will still taste very good without them.

A word about Indian chillies
Just like Mexican and Korean cuisines, Indian cuisine also involves extensive use of chillies. Interestingly, some kinds of chillies are not hot, but just add flavor and colour to a particular dish. Indian cooking makes use of chillies in varied ways to impart distinct tastes and colours. There are a number of dry red chilli (sookhi laal/lal mirch) varieties used in Indian cooking, the prominent ones being the Kashmiri red chillies, the ‘fake’ Kashmiri red chillies (called dubby), single reshampatti, double reshampatti, yellowish red chillies, byadgi, Goan small and pointed red chillies, Guntur red chillies and Nellore red chillies. The good news is that, rogan josh demands the use of Kashmiri red chilli powder, which is just mildly hot!

The traditional Kashmiri Muslim banquet: Wazwan
A feast fit for kings, Wazwan is a grandiose of different kinds of meat preparations and delicacies (prepared traditionally by master chefs called waza). Comprising of almost 36 courses (salute to the royal Kashmiri appetite!), more than half of the Wazwan dishes are meat-based. A traditional Wazwan meal is generally served in group of four, where people sit together and eat from one huge plate. Wazwan, which involves hours of hard work, is an example of Kashmiri hospitality, in which the guest in the house is the first to be served with an array of delicacies

A traditional Wazwani dinner at a Kashmiri household or restaurant involves cleaning the hands with warm water (in a traditional vessel) before anything else. The delicacies include popular names, such as tabak maazrogan josh and rista, along with an assortment of kebabs and vegetable preparations. Finally, another unparalleled meat dish called gushtaba is served, before moving on to the dessert. Phirni is the common dessert cooked here, with rice and milk as the main ingredients. Last but not the least, the Wazwan is never complete without a cup of warm kahwah tea!

In Kashmiri cuisine, the use of curd or unsweetened yogurt (dahi) is very common, as are asafoetida (hing), aniseed (saunf), Kashmiri red chillies, saffron, dry fruits, nuts and dry ginger (saunth).

Kashmiri Rogan Josh
Note: This recipe is an amalgamation of Hindu and Muslim ways of cooking traditional Rogan Josh. That is why, both onion and curd are used together. Also, exotic ingredients, such as ratan jot, have been replaced to make it compliant with the global palate.

What you need
• Mutton of a young goat (cut into two-inch-sized pieces, along with bones): 1 kg
• Garlic cloves (finely chopped): 4
• Kashmiri chilli powder: 2.5 tsp
• Curd or unsweetened yogurt: ½ cup
• Shallots (chopped): 250 g
• Mustard oil or a 1:1 combination of any light oil (except olive oil and groundnut oil) and ghee: ¼ cup
• Cloves: 4
• Large, black cardamoms: 2
• Green cardamoms: 5
• Cinnamon: 1-inch stick
• Bay leaf (dried): 1
• Mace: 1 blade
• Coriander powder: 1 tsp
• Fennel powder: 1 tsp
• Dry ginger powder: 1 tsp
• Turmeric powder: ¼ tsp
• Salt (according to taste): 1.5 tsp
• Water: 4.5 cups
• Warm milk: 4 tbsp
• Saffron strands: 8
• Garam masala powder: ½ tsp
• Coriander leaves (chopped): to garnish

How to cook it
1. Boil the mutton (along with the bones) with the garlic, half the salt and water, until the mutton is half done. Remove from heat and strain the stock. Keep the boiled meat aside.
2. Whisk the curd properly with 3 tbsp water and set aside.
3. Mix the saffron with warm milk and keep aside.
4. Fry the shallots in oil, until they are just light brown. Add cloves, bay leaf, cinnamon, cardamoms and the mace and fry for 1 min.
5. Add the coriander, ginger, fennel and turmeric powders dissolved in a little (around 5 tbsp) of the reserved mutton broth. Lower the heat and add the curd to this and stir continuously to avoid the curd getting lumpy (that is why, while whisking, water is always added to the curd).
6. After 5 min, add the boiled meat. Sauté for about 15 min, until the liquid almost evaporates and the sauce coats the mutton well. Add the remaining salt, garam masala powder and the mutton stock and stir thoroughly.
7. Add the chilli powder, cover and boil for 15 more minutes, or till the mutton is soft, yet chewy and the gravy looks thick and creamy. Add the saffron-milk mixture and cook for 5 more minutes, stirring well.
8. Garnish with freshly chopped coriander leaves and serve with pilau, steamed rice, roti or naan.

Courtesy of Cosmopolitan Currymania

Indian Tiffin

A three-tier tiffin

Fed up with mangy sandwiches and cheese and onion crisps at lunchtime? Right curry lovers, it could be time to get an Tiffin – the cool metal containers that keep food fresh. The containers – curry in one, rice in another, bread in the other maybe? – stack on each other and snap shut with a clasp. You can order online from Indian Tiffin, and better still readers of this site can get a 15 per cent discount off their first order until the end of February 2012 by entering the code ‘gcc15’.

The site also offers other curry goodies such as dabba spice tins, whish keep your spices fresh and also makes life easier when cooking as your spices will all be close to hand. Or why not order organic spices or a roti making kit?

A dabba spice tin

Goan breakfast curry

Whispering Palms Beach Resort, Goa
(Review by Laughing M) 

Well, it’s only the second day of this Goan adventure and acclimatising to the heat is still the watch word of the day. Yesterday proved that the 30 degrees of searing heat, a dozen Kingfishers plus a brace of G&Ts (purely for their medicinal power of keeping the mosquitoes at bay you’ll understand) make for a heady mix.

I’m convinced that the bartender can’t count, but at the end of the night neither could I. The only recollection I have is that his uncle runs a taxi firm and his mate has the best and cheapest restaurant in town (which I’ll have to find). All travellers will recognise this situation and take it with a pinch of salt. I would suggest that the above estimation be taken the same way, or consider the question coming from your doctor, “How much do you drink?”  So I’m claiming the fifth and the above estimation is merely for the record.

The point of my story? Well, the result of this exuberance was a sore head and a missed breakfast at the Whispering Palms Beach Resort. It would turn out that apart from the sore head, this was more than a mistake on my part, as when, I did make it to breakfast the next day, it was superb.

For the curry lovers among us there was a revelation of Goan curry dishes and condiments. I started with plain rice, to this was added a fish curry using a Goan favourite Kingfish, a plain white fish. This was in a sauce that was not hot but very tasty; I suppose I’d say it was a type of korma.

Okra (lady’s fingers) has never been a dish I’ve enjoyed. However, this breakfast was to force me to reconsider this vegetable again. It was presented as Bhindi Bhaji, with the okra cut into small pieces, (10cm) along with green pepper and red onion, again both cut into small pieces, then fried with garlic and fennel seeds. There seemed to be little oil in this dish so I’d try this more as a dry fry, adding just a little oil at a time.

The most revealing vegetable has been the cauliflower. If I was looking for a national vegetable of India, then apart from the red onion, this would have to be it. It seems to appear in so many dishes; one was deep-fried with a batter of mustard seeds with a taste of cardamom and chopped coriander in there. The Aloo Gobi (cauliflower and potato) seems to be available at every meal.

Another vegetable to come to the fore is the humble pea. Vatanyachi Bhaji (Green Peas Curry) has quickly become a favourite dish; the textures and taste of the bhaji of peas, potato, green chillis and coriander are truly amazing. I would recommend looking this one up one the internet and having a bash at this if you like those surprising little peas.

The aim is now to taste as many dishes as possible and where possible to learn how to recreate the menu and add to the repertoire of my curry cooking. So look out Greenwich Curry Club, you might all become guinea pigs in the next few months…

The Whispering Palms Beach Resort, Sinquerim Beach, Candolim Bardez, 403505, Goa. Tel: +91 832 6651515

The Whispering Palms Beach Resort snapshot

Food ① ② ③ ④

Decor ① ② ③ ④

Value n/a (Inclusive of holiday)

Atmosphere ① ②

Service and friendliness ① ② ③