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Madras
Madras
(heat 7/10)
This is the classic restaurant curry, fairly hot but not lethal! Adding tomatoes towards the end of cooking gives a certain freshness to the sauce. Feel free to add your own chillies if you feel it is too benign to be a true madras!
Serves: 4-6
(heat 7/10)
This is the classic restaurant curry, fairly hot but not lethal! Adding tomatoes towards the end of cooking gives a certain freshness to the sauce. Feel free to add your own chillies if you feel it is too benign to be a true madras!
Serves: 4-6
Spice Mix Ingredients: coriander seeds, salt, black pepper, dried chillies, cumin seeds, fennel seeds, garam masala (includes cloves, fenugreek seeds, poppy seeds, ginger), nigella seeds, yellow mustard seeds, rice flour, turmeric, cayenne, asafoetida, cardamom, fenugreek leaves, black cardamom.
Allergens: see ingredients in bold
Ingredients:
1 carton Madras curry spices (recipe card included!)
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1 onion, thinly sliced
700g/1.5lb beef, in 2.5cm/1inch cubes
300ml/1/2 pint ‘secret sauce’
1 can tomatoes, chopped ot blended
1 tbsp tomato puree
Juice of 1 lime
3 medium tomatoes, quartered
handful of desiccated coconut (optional)
handful of coriander, to serve
Recipe:
Heat the oil in a large pan. Gently fry the onion until translucent, then remove with a slotted spoon so the oil remains in the pan.
Turn up the heat, stir in the spices for a minute or two until fragrant, then add the beef and brown all over.
Add the ‘secret sauce’, can of tomatoes, puree and onion, bring to the boil then simmer for 30 minutes. It can then be turned off and left until a couple of hours before the meal. Resting like this actually improves the depth of flavour. If you think the sauce is very thick then add some water gradually. It will not dilute the flavour.
About 2 hours before the meal reheat the curry and simmer gently until tender.
Add the lime juice to taste, with the tomatoes, about 20 minutes before serving. Add the desiccated coconut at this stage if you are using it.
Serve with rice and scattered with chopped coriander.
Cook's Notes:
The sauce is of course just as good with lamb and chicken. Lamb needs an hour’s less cooking. Chicken should be browned separately then added to the sauce 10 minutes before serving.