Showing posts with label curry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curry. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 June 2022

Samsara Indian Restaurant, Cheam, Surrey


I don’t often do girls’ nights out ever since I became a mum - most of the time I am just too tired and don’t have the time to think about a social life.

So it’s great when someone else organises an evening out and invites me! It was a friend’s birthday so four of us went for a curry and cocktails at Samsara in Cheam, a restaurant I hadn’t been to before.

It's a fairly large restaurant but was very empty with only a few other people there, which is a shame as the food was good - though the cocktails weren't quite as good as I was hoping.

I normally play it very safe when it comes to curry (chicken korma every time!) but decided for once to try something new - though still a mild chicken dish with almonds and a sweeter taste! I had a chicken dakeswari, which the menu described as "tender pieces of grilled chicken, marinated with herbs, spices and ground almond. Very mildly spiced and garnished with mango pulp". It was very nice and creamy with a fruity flavour, and not too spicy at all, and accompanied by a very tasty peshwari naan.

As I wasn't driving I was looking forward to sampling the cocktail menu as Samsara also describes itself as a cocktail lounge. I didn't see anyone who had just gone there for drinks and I don't think I've ever had a cocktail in an Indian restaurant before as I would always go for wine. I started with a mango and peach fizz to complement the mango flavours of my meal, then thought that a White Russian would be a good substitute for dessert as it combined cream and coffee. One of my friends ordered the same drink, and they were both served in tumblers - not quite what I was expecting - but of different sizes, so one of us had a tall glass and the other a much shorter wider one. I'm no mixologist but my White Russian seemed a bit heavy on the cream, and not as nice as I had remembered them being.

We took admittedly quite a long time over dinner; we hadn't started particularly early and also had a lot of catching up to do, but it was a surprise when the waiters started hovering and making clear signs that they wanted us to pay the bill and leave. Eventually one came over and said it was 10pm and they were closing - which was surprising as the website said they were open until 11am. I can only assume that because they had been quiet that evening and were the last people there, they wanted to be able to close and head home.

Still, it was a fun night out with friends and good food, and nice to try somewhere local I hadn't been before - and to branch out from choosing a chicken korma for a change!


Sunday, 8 November 2020

GBBO Japanese Week - Wagamama's Tori Kara Age and Chicken Katsu Curry


I was a bit surprised when I saw Great British Bake Off was doing Japanese week, as I didn’t think Japan was a particularly easy theme for cakes and bakes. Of course, I’ve never been to Japan so could be completely wrong – and a few years ago I did go to the opening of a Japanese cafe in central London which was really nice. But when I googled Japanese desserts, the main things that came up used flavours that are quite hard to get hold of unless you can go to a specialist shop, like yuzu, matcha and red bean paste. One recipe I kept coming across was a really light wobbly cheesecake that looked quite difficult to make – which is what Lottie actually made on GBBO that made her star baker.

I have made mochi before which was interesting – quite nice but not something I’d eat regularly – but since I couldn’t get hold of any matcha or yuzu in time I couldn’t think of anything I could bake that wouldn’t be really complicated. So I decided to do dinner from my Wagamama cookery book instead! I picked out Tori Kara Age which is essentially a marinated fried chicken recipe. I didn’t realise it was actually a side dish as I have never ordered this in Wagamama’s, but I think it also goes well with rice as a main course.

It is a little time consuming to make since you have to make the marinade (which is a separate recipe) first, and then a dipping sauce (another separate recipe). Luckily I already had most of the ingredients, including sake, from a previous recipe; this uses quite a lot of soy sauce as well so make sure you have plenty! Once I had marinated the chicken pieces they were coated and fried; the dipping sauce added an umami sort of taste that was really quite more-ish!



My favourite Wagamama recipe though is the dish I order almost every time I eat there (which is only once every couple of years, if that, as my husband doesn’t like that cuisine) – chicken katsu curry. So I was quite pleased when the restaurant chain decided to publish their recipe during the first lockdown, for people to make at home. It is surprisingly easy – you need quite a few ingredients but all ones I already had in the cupboard. I tend to take a shortcut and buy breaded chicken goujons rather than make my own, but the sauce tastes exactly like the real thing and has quickly become a firm favourite in my household!

I was also interested to learn about kawaii from Great British Bake Off - a style of Japanese cake decorating that translates as cute or adorable. If you see a kawaii cake you will know straight away what I mean! I have made a few things in the past that might fall roughly under this category - not strictly speaking kawaii, but I think they are quite cute! Check these out:

Reindeer cake pops

Puppy dog cupcakes

Cupcake

Russian doll birthday cake

Shopkins doughnut birthday cake

Strawberry and white chocolate unicorn cake

Saturday, 21 January 2017

WeightWatchers Curried Fish Pie


Fish pie is a comforting family staple and is usually topped with mashed potato or puff pastry. The former is carb-heavy and the latter high in fat, so using filo pastry is a much lighter option.

I adapted a recipe in an old WeightWatchers magazine to make this, which tasted really good and made a nice change from the usual kind of fish pie. The WeightWatchers recipe had 6.5 syns per serving and I don't think my changes will have affected that.

To serve 2 you need:

175g white fish like cod or haddock, cut into cubes
1/2 tsp ground turmeric
75ml double cream (the WeightWatchers recipe calls for less than 55% fat double cream)
100g cooked and peeled prawns
1/2 tbsp. mild curry powder
zest of 1/2 a lime
4 x 15g sheets filo pastry
low fat cooking spray (I use Fry Light)

Preheat oven to 180C. Place the cubed fish and prawns in the bottom of an ovenproof dish and mix with the cream, curry powder and lime zest.

Cut each sheet of filo pastry in half to make 8 squares. Spray one side of the pastry with cooking spray and crumble up each piece of pastry and sit it on top of the pie dish until it is covered. Once you have used all the pastry, spray over them all with cooking spray.

Bake in the oven for 25 minutes until golden brown.





 

Sunday, 13 November 2016

MidWeek Coconut Fish Curry


I love prawns, and think they work really well with pasta or curry, so when I came across this recipe for a coconut fish curry on the BBC Good Food website, where the prawns took centre stage, I knew I had to make it. The flavours are inspired by both India and Thailand and doesn't take that long to cook -the part that took longest was probably finding all the ingredients in the cupboard! So it makes a great mid-week meal.

The shrimp paste in the recipe is not the kind that you may have had n your sandwiches as a child; it is an essential ingredient in Thai cooking. These days it is easy to find in supermarkets like Tesco though, in the speciality ingredients aisle.

To serve 4, you need:
1 tbsp. vegetable oil
1 onion, finely chopped
1 thumb-sized piece of ginger, finely grated
3 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tsp shrimp paste
1 small red chilli, de-seeded and finely chopped
2 lemongrass stalks, split and bruised with a rolling pin
1 heaped tbsp. medium curry powder
1 heaped tbsp. light muscovado sugar
small bunch of coriander, stems finely chopped
400g can coconut milk
450g skinless hake or other white fish fillets, cut into large chunks
220g prawns
1 lime, halved
cooked rice to serve
I also served mine with some broccoli

Heat the oil in a large frying pan and cook the onion for 5 minutes until softened. Stir in the ginger, garlic, shrimp paste, chilli and lemongrass and cook for 2 minutes.

Add the curry powder and sugar and stir until the sugar starts to melt, then add the coriander stems, coconut milk and 2 tbsp. water. Bring to a simmer.
 

Add the fish and prawns and squeeze in half the lime. Simmer for 5 minutes until the fish is cooked, scatter over the coriander leaves and serve.


Sunday, 30 October 2016

Cauliflower Tikka Masala, Diwali and Memories of Gwalior

This weekend is Diwali, the Festival of Light, celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists, so what better time for a vegetable curry recipe?

Diwali celebrates the triumph of light over darkness and good over evil; people clean and decorate their homes, put on new clothes and light lamps and candles both inside and outside their homes, praying to Lakshmi, the goddess of fertility and prosperity. Gifts are exchanged and Indian sweets are eaten - we had some in the office at work for people to try.

The festival has a different origin for other religions, and when I was reading up on it for an article I wrote for the intranet at work, I discovered Sikhs celebrate Diwali as marking the release of the Sixth Guru, Guru Hargobind, from a prison in Gwalior, India. The reason I was so fascinated by this is that I have actually been to Gwalior!

 

In 2008 I went to the wedding of two friends in Bhopal, India. Both bride and groom lived in the UK but both had families in India so they had a ceremony in England but the wedding itself was in India. A group of my university friends decided to go - I remember doing a lot of the planning, booking train journeys so we could fly into Delhi, visit the Taj Mahal and make our way down the country to where the wedding was taking place. While looking for somewhere to stop on the way we came across Gwalior and spend a day walking around the fort and a night in a hotel there. We had a fantastic time - looking back at the photos now I was struck by the majesty of some of the sights we saw (and then by how different I looked eight years ago!).

This is a Jamie Oliver recipe from the Sunday Times magazine - possibly quite some time ago. I'm not sure as I tore the page out and kept it in my recipe clippings folder. The recipe involves roasting a whole cauliflower but I wanted to make this a quicker, easier recipe so cut the cauliflower into florets. I actually steamed them rather than roasted as well to speed up the process so the flavour of my dish was undoubtedly different to the intended recipe, but I did use the recipe to make the sauce, which involved quite a lot of ingredients and a bit of effort.

This is the version I did with steamed cauliflower rather than the whole roasted one:
To serve 4, you need:
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp coriander seeds
3 fresh red chillies
2 thumb-sized pieces of ginger, peeled
2 tbsp. garam masala
1 tbsp. sweet smoked paprika
1 bunch fresh coriander
75g flaked almonds
2 tbsp. tomato puree
groundnut oil
2 onions
400g tin light coconut milk
400g tin tomatoes
1 whole cauliflower

 
Toast the cumin and coriander seeds in a dry pan then put in a food processor. Trim two of the chillies and add to the food processor with one of the pieces of ginger, the garlic, garam masala, paprika, most of the coriander and almonds. Pulse until you have a smooth paste, add the tomato puree, season and blend again.

 
Finely slice the remaining ginger with the onion and remaining chilli. Put a casserole pan over a medium heat and add some oil. Fry the ginger, onion and chilli for ten minutes. Spoon in the spice paste, turn down the heat and fry for ten minutes. Meanwhile cut the cauliflower into florets and steam.

 
Add the coconut milk and tomatoes, bring to the boil then simmer until thickened.

 
Toast the leftover almonds in a dry pan. Mix the cooked cauliflower with the curry sauce and top with the toasted almonds and rest of the chopped coriander. Serve with rice.


 
I'm sharing this with the Food Calendar at Charlotte's Lively Kitchen.

Friday, 2 September 2016

Slow Cooker Chicken Korma



I’m often trying different curry recipes to find one that is closest to take-away – I don’t have takeaway or restaurant curries very often (probably just a couple of times a year) but do love a chicken korma. This slow-cooker recipe isn’t quite like the takeaway ones, as the sauce is not as thick or as sweet, but I think it’s a lot healthier! It’s easy to make too – after a bit of initial prep you put everything into the slow cooker. The recipe comes from a book called 200 Slow Cooker Recipes but I adapted it.

You need:
 
2 tbsp sunflower oil
8 chicken thighs, skinned boned and cubed
2 onions, peeled and chopped
1-2 green chillies to taste, deseeded and finely chopped
2.5m fresh root ginger, peeled and finely chopped
5 tbsp korma curry paste
250ml coconut cream or milk (I took this to mean coconut milk, not regular milk)
300ml chicken stock
2 tbsp ground almonds
 
 
Fry the chicken in a frying pan until it has browned, then put it in your slow cooker.
 
 
Add the onions, chillies, ginger, curry paste to the frying pan, and fry for 2-3 mins.
 
Pour in the coconut cream or milk, stock and ground almonds. Chop half the coriander and add to the sauce and season. Bring to the boil then spoon over the chicken in the slow cooker.
 
 
Cook in the slow cooker according to the machine instructions 6-8 hours.

 
 
Serve with rice

 I'm sharing this with the Slow Cooker challenge hosted by Lucy at Bakingqueen74 and Janice at Farmersgirl Kitchen.

 

Tuesday, 31 May 2016

Slow Cooker Thai Green Beef Curry

I've been trying to use up the contents of my freezer so I can fit my ice cream maker inside! It's been quite interesting as I've made a list of everything in there and intend to cross it off and add to it - no more rummaging wondering whether we have any more chicken breasts, or telling my fiancé there is no garlic bread left and then finding some the next day (sorry!). It's also meant I don't have to buy as much as there is more food in there than I thought!

One thing I came across was a packet of cubed beef. My fiancé loves steak but isn't as keen on beef when it's casseroled but this sort of cubed beef really is best in the slow cooker. Rather than do a traditional casserole though I wondered if I could make it into a curry, and found this recipe from BBC Good Food for Thai Beef curry.

I used red chilli rather than green as that's what I had in the fridge, and I already had some galangal from when I made a Thai curry from scratch after doing a cookery class last year. I bought it from Sainsbury's so there's no need to find a specialist shop - though if you live in an area with Thai food stores then definitely go and have a look! Star anise is also something I've had in the cupboard for a while and I know spices do lose their potency so it was good to be able to use them. I didn't have any kaffir lime leaves either so I know this wasn't quite as authentic, but it still tasted really good. And my fiancé enjoyed it which was great as I really wasn't sure he would like it!

See link above for recipe.





Thursday, 5 May 2016

Slimming World Creamy Coriander and Minted Chicken


This recipe comes from the Slimming World All In One cookbook. To me it tasted a lot like a curry, but perhaps a little bit different; I really liked the addition of fresh mint but my fiancé said afterwards it was nice but would have been better without the mint!

The recipe is Free on Extra Easy or Original and 9.5 syns on Green.

It does look like you need a lot of ingredients but a lot of them are store cupboard staples - if you like to cook from scratch you probably already have, or will easily use up, things like coriander, cumin, turmeric and chilli powder.

To serve 4, you need:
low calorie cooking spray, eg Fry Light
2 onions, peeled, halved and thinly sliced
2 cloves (I left these out)
2 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed (I used garlic puree)
2 cardamom pods
2cm piece root ginger, peeled and grated (I used ground ginger for convenience)
1 cinnamon stick (I snapped mine into two pieces)
1 bay leaf
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp cumin
1 tsp turmeric
1 tsp chilli powder
700g skinless and boneless chicken breasts, cut into 2cm pieces
salt, pepper
4 ripe tomatoes, roughly chopped (neither of us eats whole tomatoes and I didn't think it was worth opening a tin of tomatoes so I left this out, which I'm sure did change the flavour of the finished dish but I preferred it this way)
200ml chicken stock
large handful of fresh coriander, chopped
small handful of fresh mint, chopped
100g fat free natural fromage frais



Spray a wok or large frying pan with the oil and add the onion, cloves, garlic and cardamom to the pan, stir-frying for a few minutes. Then add the other spices including the cinnamon stick and bay leaf and cook for a few minutes.

Add the chicken and cook for about 10 minutes. Stir in the tomatoes stock and simmer for 5-7 mins until the chicken is cooked through.

To serve, stir in the fromage frais, fresh coriander and mint.

Tuesday, 17 November 2015

Flavours of Thailand Cookery Course at Food at 52

 
 
Thai food has largely been a mystery to me. I’ve never been to Thailand, and when I’ve cooked Thai food at home it’s usually been a case of a spoonful of Thai red curry paste from a jar and adding a tin of coconut milk. That’s Thai food, right? (Uh, not really).
 
I occasionally have Thai food when I eat out, and my future mother in law really likes a particular Thai takeaway, but the last time we got dinner from there, we waited 2 hours, gave up and went and collected it ourselves! I thought at the time, what I shame I don’t know how to make proper Thai food at home…
 
Luckily the nice people at the Food at 52 cookery school stepped in to help. You may have seen that I went to an Old El Paso product launch there recently.
 
The people who ran the cookery school, which Old El Paso had booked for the evening, invited me back to do one of their other courses. I had a look at the list on their website – courses range from kitchen confidence, mid-week seasonal suppers and meat-free Monday meals to the cusines of different countries such as Spanish, Moroccan, Southern Indian, Vietnamese and Thai. I signed up to Flavours of Thailand.
  
The cookery school is near Old Street in London so very easy for me to get to from work. There were 10 people, each at our own workstation along a long wooden table, with the chef John in the middle. The class was quite fast-paced but they don’t assume any prior knowledge – which is good as when it comes to Thai ingredients I didn’t have any. John also demonstrated good knife skills and passed on all sorts of other tips.
 
 
 
We began by making a Thai salad with green papaya – I’d never even come across a green papaya before and looked more like a giant cucumber than the orange-fleshed tropical fruit I was familiar with when I’ve eaten papaya. It was peeled and pushed through a food processor with a shredder attachment – this would form the basis of our salad.
 
 
 
John demonstrated how to prepare the other ingredients then we each took on one or two tasks – I was finely slicing ginger and lemongrass while someone else did red chillis.
 
I was then asked to thinly slice a piece of fillet steak which was sprinkled with lime juice, ceviche style, so it did not actually need to be cooked.
 
 
 
To make the dressing a large stone pestle and mortar was used, and we ground together chilli, palm sugar, garlic, lime juice, coriander stems and white sugar. We were encouraged to taste the dressing and while everyone was sagely nodding, saying it was a bit fiery perhaps, I couldn’t speak! I’m not good with spicy food and at this point wondered how I was going to be able to eat anything… then the fish sauce (nam pla) was added and it totally changed the taste. Before, you could almost pick out each flavour individually – the sharpness of the lime (there was a lot of lime) hit you first, then the warmth of the ginger, then the fiery chilli at the back of your throat. The fish sauce somehow brought all the flavours together and toned down the spice a bit.
 
 
 
To make our salad we took a handful of shredded green papaya, some beef, and added dried shrimp, dried red onion and some mint and poured the sauce over the top. It was delicious!
 
 
 
For the main course we made a green curry with seabass and green peppercorns. John held up some green birdseye chillis and asked how many we thought we should add to the dish.. I was thinking one or two or maybe even less, and I almost fell off my chair when he said the answer was 80! We each took 8 and learned the right way to prepare them – slice in half from the end, sliding a sharp knife through horizontally. Then use the heel of the knife – if it’s a big knife with a small handle like we had – to scrape the seeds and membrane out in one go. I used to turn chillis over and cut with the shiny, hard side facing up but this is wrong and you should actually have the soft underneath facing up.
 
 
The reason for adding so many chillis isn’t just heat – they also give flavour, and colour. Apparently some cheap curries use green bell peppers to give the same colour. But as you don’t want it too spicy to eat, the taste is tempered – as the salad dressing was – with fish sauce.
 
 
The chillis were put in an electric chopper along with something called galangal, some lemongrass, kaffir lime leaves, coriander root, shallots, garlic, shrimp paste, peppercorns, coriander seeds and cumin seeds to make a paste.
 
 
Did you know you can make oil from coconut milk? When you open a tin of coconut milk you always get a thick layer of cream on top and the liquid – like water – underneath. Spoon off about half the thick cream and heat in a wok or frying pan. Keep heating until the cream actually separates – you are burning the water content off and reducing it down to an oil. This means there’s no need to add any extra oil to your pan.
 
 
 
Place 1 level tbsp. per person of the curry paste into the pan and heat, stirring. Pour in the rest of the tin of coconut milk – cream and water – and scrape around the sides to incorporate the green paste and add some fish sauce and palm sugar. We poured this into an earthenware bowl with a lid and left on one side for a while then put the bowl back on the heat to gently heat through. We added sweet Thai basil and peppercorns at the end to serve.
 
 
 
The curry was served over rice and was delicious – it had quite a kick but was nowhere near as spicy as I was expecting and it tasted so good.
 
 
We had a quick dessert which John demonstrated – sticky rice with mango. You just cook some glutinous (rather than jasmine) rice and mix some chopped mango with some mango puree from a tin (which has more flavour and provides the liquid you need). Spoon some rice into a bowl or plate, spoon the mango chunks and sauce around it and sprinkle with some dried coconut and torn mint leaves. Far better than the rice pudding I had as a child!
 
 
 
I really enjoyed the evening and the laid-back atmosphere of the chef- John was a great tutor and happy to answer questions on anything else (e.g. the trick to a good Pad Thai) and made the evening a lot of fun. They don’t stint on the drinks either – aside from suggesting we might want to go easy on the wine until we had finished chopping with sharp knives, the drinks flowed all evening and we really bonded as a group even though most people had come in pairs or on their own as I did. The course cost £115 but for that we started at 6.30pm and went on until 10; had starters of spring rolls, then of course ate the three courses we’d prepared, had plenty of wine and learnt some really useful techniques. I highly recommend Food at 52 – and will definitely be making more Thai food at home!
 
I was a guest of Food at 52 and asked to write a review – all opinions are my own.

Saturday, 18 April 2015

Chicken Machboos



This weekend's Formula 1 Grand Prix is in Bahrain which was never going to be easy in terms of thinking of something to cook for my blog challenge Formula 1 Foods. I turned to the internet to search for recipes and one in particular kept coming up - a type of curry, usually with chicken, called machboos. Apparently it's the national dish of Bahrain and is a spiced chicken and rice dish with a blend of Arabic spices. It's similar to an Indian biriyani.

I found many recipes for this which were all slightly different and ended up choosing different elements of each; for instance my boyfriend doesn't eat chicken thighs or legs so I used breast; I didn't have any of the specific spice blend so mixed together what I had that went into it, and I have to admit making a big change that probably changed this dish quite a lot - rather than cooking the rice together with the chicken I used microwavable rice and added it afterwards. That is probably sacrilege but I didn't have much time (not getting home from work until 7pm and that's if the trains are running on time, which usually they are not) and I am hopeless at cooking rice from scratch!

So the recipe I used, pieced together from various others, was:
to serve 2:
1 onion, chopped
1 glove garlic, crushed
2 chicken breasts, diced
1/2 tsp black peppercorns
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground coriander
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
1/2 tsp paprika
1/2 tsp turmeric
squeeze of lemon juice
1 tbsp. oil
200ml chicken stock
200g tinned tomatoes

Fry the chopped onion and garlic in the oil in a large pan then add the spices.

Add the chicken and fry until cooked through.

Add the tomatoes, stock and lemon juice and cook until the sauce has reduced by half.

Serve with rice



I'm sending this to Formula 1 Foods, the blog challenge I host - you've still got a few days to add any Bahrain or Formula 1 inspired recipes!