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I'm jealous. For me to get curry, I either have to make it myself or drive over 2 hours.. : (jonesthecurl wrote:We went out for a curry on Friday - both kids were off at some friends' houses and I said "Sod cooking". THe local curry house is not as good as the average one in the UK, but it's passable - and they've finally started doing popadoms.
Its actually a group of dishes that use curry spices (don't ask me to name them), meat and/or vegetables, often over rice, sometimes with a type of flatbread. It can be quite spicey, though western versions are generally mild.HapSmo19 wrote:What do you guys mean by "a" curry? What dish exactly? Or approximately....
I would be interested!jonesthecurl wrote:but I'd be very happy to put forward some of my favourites, with starting-from-scratch instructions, if anyone wants to hear that.
I'd love to hear a recipe jonesey but I'll need spice names and all that cuz I've never tried cooking thai. I'll try it sometime this week and report back on itjonesthecurl wrote:If you want to cook your own curry, have nothing to do with curry powders or bottled/tinned curry sauces. Find somewhere that will sell you fresh spices, and grind them yourself. There's plenty of recipes available, but I'd be very happy to put forward some of my favourites, with starting-from-scratch instructions, if anyone wants to hear that.
A friend of mine has a obsessive/compulsive fixation with extremely spicy food. Indian, Thai, Cajun, Mexican, whatever. The spicier, the better as far as he's concerned. And if it's not spicy enough, he'll happily drown anything in any sort of hot sauce. He also happens to dye his hair blue. It is endlessly amusing watching him douche his Hooters 911 hot wings down with extra hot sauce and then try to act all suave with the Hooters girls as blue rivulets of sweat trickle down his forehead.jonesthecurl wrote:Eating curry became sometimes a macho competition rather than a pleasant experience.

jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
I’m surprised that you have to travel so far to reach an Indian Restaurant. After looking at the amount of red dots, on a recent thread, that indicated the amount of Chinese restaurants in New York.PLAYER57832 wrote:I'm jealous. For me to get curry, I either have to make it myself or drive over 2 hours.. : (
I live about 8 hours from New York City and over 2 hours from Buffalo, NY. Also over 2 hours from Pittsburgh. We are pretty much in the "boonies".Pedronicus wrote:I’m surprised that you have to travel so far to reach an Indian Restaurant. After looking at the amount of red dots, on a recent thread, that indicated the amount of Chinese restaurants in New York.PLAYER57832 wrote:I'm jealous. For me to get curry, I either have to make it myself or drive over 2 hours.. : (
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&sourc ... UTF8&z=13l
http://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewto ... +%E2%80%A6HapSmo19 wrote:19th post!
jonesthecurl wrote:
Traditionally, British "Indian" restaurants (actually very often Bangla-Deshi) had a standard menu in which the spice heat would be arbitrarily measured by a regional nomenclature only vaguely related to reality - so that "Vindaloo" would be really hot, "Madras" would be pretty hot etc. Many macho lager-drinkers would actually challenge each other to eat hotter and hotter curries, leading to the invention of the ludicrously-named "Tindaloo". Eating curry became sometimes a macho competition rather than a pleasant experience.
No, I was just trying to make an obviously failed joke about the "macho" type competition to eat the spiciest foor.jonesthecurl wrote:If you want a food history thread, that's ok - but it is a separate question.
The cuisine (and more) of the whole world has been altered by the "discovery" of the Americas.
No Americas, no turkey, no cocaine, no tomato, no chili, no chocolate, no marijuana, no tobacco, no corn, no potato, (feel free to join in, folks)...about half of the world's basic foodstuffs came from the "New World".
jonesthecurl wrote:Traditionally, British "Indian" restaurants (actually very often Bangla-Deshi) had a standard menu in which the spice heat would be arbitrarily measured by a regional nomenclature only vaguely related to reality - so that "Vindaloo" would be really hot, "Madras" would be pretty hot etc. Many macho lager-drinkers would actually challenge each other to eat hotter and hotter curries, leading to the invention of the ludicrously-named "Tindaloo". Eating curry became sometimes a macho competition rather than a pleasant experience.
