Will! Yes Chef! Looked and I'm sure it tasted delicious. Will, please don't take this as a criticism, but just a suggestion for home cooks for cooking Naans - if you're lucky enough to have an electric fan oven with a grill that you can turn on at the same time, set them both as hot as they will go, put a cast iron pan or cast iron griddle plate in there to pre heat to as hot as as it'll go. Then drop your Naan onto the cast iron, with the grill still on, then you get heat from top and bottom! Warning be bloody careful not to burn yourself as the cast iron etc will be ridiculously hot! Thanks for sharing 🙂😋😎❤
I've been cooking chicken curry like this for the best part of 35 years. I can confirm. This is the way. Get your chicken in that garlic/ginger mix the night before for stunning results. Add a teaspoon or two of gram flour to the yoghurt mix if you've got any. Makes it stick to the chicken better,
I add a bit of water to the bottom of the naan before throwing it into a pan, the steam created from evaporation helps create the bubbles / volume for me.
Ah dude, I love that you included the recipe in this video. I can't wait to visit Fallow. Hopefully you and Jack will be there for that coveted selfie! It will be nice to see your chefs in action in your lovely open kitchen as well.
Good work, chef. In the early 90s I worked at a balti-fusion restaurant in the Midlands for a while; picked up some great tips from Asian chefs who staged there. Kashmiri red chilli powder is a must in murgh makhani (butter chicken); not a hot spice but it adds a smoky flavour and vibrant colour to the dish. Asafoetida (aka 'hing') is a dried gum resin that gives umami to the gravy, plus acts as a light thickener, almost like an Indian MSG. Not a deal breaker, but it's one of those spices that is noticeable when missing. Finally a good whack of fresh or dried methi (fenugreek) leaves along with the coriander; like ghee it's one of those ingredients that gives a more "restaurant" taste to your cooking. Love the channel - your body cams bring back the excitement and stress of a Saturday night shift!
28 states in India comes with 28 different interpretations of curry. It’s not about whether we get it right or wrong, it’s all about cooking it and appreciating the food by finishing the plate and washing the dishes with a big smile of satisfaction.
I damp the side of the dough going on the pan, it allows the nan to stick when I turn it over for direct fire (only one pan used). Got to use a spatula to get i5 off after.
A good tip if you dont know how to bring out the sweetness of the tomato paste... Use a passata or Ajvar paste (its a combination of roasted tomato and peppers in a paste), very tasty.
In Ireland, "gee" is a slang term for lady parts. So the chat from about 1m-2m about "ghee having rich flavour, I'm not a ghee hater, I love ghee, but you may not have ghee in your home" was very enjoyable
I get a pretty damn good naan at home using my pizza steel on the highest oven rack in combination with the broiler. Cooks really quickly, and you get the one side flat+crisp, one side bubbly + char like a tandoor. Come to think of it, you could likely replicate this tech with a skillet if you lack a steel
I make a banging Durban curry! My elderly friend from Yorkshire swears that it’s the best curry that he’s had and asks for it at least 3 times a month... Would you kindly demonstrate your version please?
Made it today. It was a hard to pick up the ground spices given it serves 8 is ¾ tsp garam masala, ¾ tsp ground cumin,½ tsp chilli powder,¼ tsp turmeric enough? I wonder if these were meant to be tbs not tsp, or maybe my spices are a lot less vibrant than yours.
This looks delicious. :) I'm so over people having to explain that their recipe is not a "traditional recipe". Is there even a such thing as a "traditional" recipe? Recipes vary by region, even within the same country. Your "traditional" recipe isn't necessarily everyone else's. Stop hounding people because they don't make things the way you do.
He said "ground fenugreek", so I think it was actually the fenugreek seed ground up, which is neither of the things you specified lol. It tastes a bit different to both of the others and has a slightly different application imo. I wouldn't use it to finish a dal or curry, for example, whereas kasuri methi I would.
"Really easy recipe" - electronic scale, Rational oven, mini food processor, second food processor from Star Trek, two cast iron pans, lightsaber rolling pin, French top stove and what looks like 300 dollar knife.
Quick question, can you overcook chicken thighs ? When I see how tender and moist it is out of the oven I would've thought putting them in a boiling curry sauce could harm the final result.
Actually the sweetness in the curry does not come from the onions, chef ranveer has a nice video about this where he explains that you should not caramelize the onions
@@jamied931 true, and he says it's his own version, so it's fine. Everyone has their own twist, I just found the notion counter intuitive and therefore thought it worthwhile to share
So many panchodas in these comments it’s unreal. Fallow guys you always smash it, even if its slightly untraditional, it will likely taste amazing regardless Fucking hate fenugreek though, thats what makes people stink 🤣
Idk why this guys sounds like a guy who would get impressed by me making a perfect dough for naan without using any measurements, because I'm Indian and i mostly cook Indian food. He might get impressed in a way that he wants to date me. (I'm so freaking delusional) Lol
"It's not really a done thing at the moment in London to walk around with a load of knives on one's person..." I mean it is, just not necessarily as a chef 🤣
How so? A curry is literally defined as a dish of meat and/or vegetables cooked in a sauce made with ground spices. It couldn’t be any more of a curry if it had an Indian flag stuck in it!
My guy, we live in a world where it's accepted that the word "literally" no longer means "literally." Relax. This is fine. You know what's meant so just go with it. Save your outrage for the things that are deserving.