Monday, October 13, 2008

Found a Curry Sauce Mix...

I'VE FOUND a fantastic Chinese Curry Sauce mix. Got it from a Chinese market stall. It's the complete shebang: wheatflour and coconut paste included, just add water and there you go. The spice mix is almost exactly right. (All takeaways vary; this could pass 100% as takeaway-authentic...) The orangey colour is the same as that illustrated: Chinese curry is never brown... The pack cost me about £1 for 10 portions, which means I'm spending 10p a time, rather than £1 a cupfull as the Chinese demand...

Coconut paste was the missing ingredient I suspected was in there but was unsure about. Chinese curry has no overt coconut flavour, though it does have onion and garlic (both in my industrially-bought mix) and these kind of tail into the mellowness of the coconut and the further smoothness of salted-up MSG. It's a work of genius that I got precisely right last night with a mushroom curry (no ££ for chicken!!)... today I'm off to get a pre-roasted chicken (so cheap it's not worth buying the salmonella'd uncooked variety) that along with mushrooms, onions and peas shall make a fantastic curry (Godwilling). Why peas are always in the mix I shall never know; but they are. Up and down the country Chinese chicken curry means chicken-onions-peas (and mushrooms if you're lucky. Or so many mushrooms there's barely any chicken if yours is a credit-crunch curry...)

I was toying last week with the thought of coconut for my curries but didn't know what form to buy. Dessicated is a bit too 1970s British (add boiled eggs and sultanas: yuck!) Coconut milk powder would probably make a wonderful starting stock. I've seen coconut cream or paste before but last week it was beyond the glimpses of my eyes and so I went without... I did get garlick paste (v useful for nongarlic eaters like me, who leave it in the cupboard until it sprouts...) Plus an authentic light soy sauce brand that comes in a pretty squat container with Chinese writing down the side and actually does taste of soy (unlike the vulgar market leader Amoy).

My robbies were running around like a mini donkey-derby last night after plunging into the pineshavings-filled diggery. They tilt up to a near vertical angle and disappear right in, each following the trail of the other. Sometimes great caves are formed below in which they pause sometimes for a roborovski-picnic. (Wise animals, Itchy keeps her pouches packed nearly all the time, which I always assumed was a size-adding measure to counter her being the tiniest of all the trotters.)

I've still been very depressed and heavy limbed and mind-crushed, which is the main reason not to have been online posting very much. Well I'm back now so HELLO HELLO again!!

PS why am I so obsessed by my curry sauce chase?

This from my commments should explain what/how:~

Liz said...
Good grief, gledwood, are you still on the hunt for Chinese curry sauce?!!!

Sorry, I've not been by for a while. I've come in via Robyn in Australia again. Seems to work well this way.

xx

12 October 2008 20:48

Gledwood said...
Found an industrial version (just add water and stir continuously)... but want to know PRECISELY WHICH SPICES and to be able to make from scratch. I hate feeling in the pocket of the industrial multinational food business and am sure Chinese takeaway chefs don't use industrial premade mixes! I'm sure they would know precisely which spices to add and in what quantities and that's what I wish to do...
13 October 2008 11:13

16 comments:

  1. Depression is a bugger alright, Gleds. But I'm so happy to see you posting again. So...you found the missing ingredient for your Chinese curry, well done! That must have required some detective work on your part. Enjoy your meal!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Star-anise is another missing ingredient of the spices mix (though not enough to make it anything aniseedy)...

    depression. despair.

    yeah yeah yeah

    (no~no!!)

    thanks for the thoughts

    ;->...

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have the feeling that the "curry" sauce you are describing is some type of "British-Chinese" invention. It sounds nothing like anything I've ever encountered in Chinese cooking. And adding coconut is very Thai and Malaysian. My favourite brand of soy sauce is Kikkoman.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I think it's true to say, you like your Chinese food, don't you?
    Something I've noticed.

    Do you like those sweet dumplings they do?

    there's a lot of good Chineses in Brum I think you'd appreciate.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Sorry to have been away so long. Still in the middle of moving but am taking today off to try and get around to see how everyone is doing. Glad to hear that the hamsters are doing great and ever more happy to see you are out of the funk you were in. I have never heard of Chinese curry, perhaps it has a different name here. Glad to hear you have mastered it at long last!

    ReplyDelete
  6. You must be happy now your search for the perfect curry sauce is over! :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Haha you are indeed a man posessed! I live in a large Chinese community and there's a big Chinese grocer in my local shopping centre, guess what? They've never heard of Chinese curry sauce! I can help you out with a good Schezuan spice though! Try coconut cream in the can for your coconutty bits, you can get teensy cans of it over here, just right for one. Your robis in the trottery sound like the mice in my feedshed, I find little holes drilled in the chaff! Buggers!

    ReplyDelete
  8. We just got some curry too, it's made in Vermont from apples and honey of all things. But we like it. Now if I can just get my darling daughter to make it for me . . .

    Janice~

    ReplyDelete
  9. gives whole new meaning to chasing the (chinese) dragon.... sorry couldn't resist it... I'll book myself into school for learning to be funny soon.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Just dropping by to say hiya! Hope all is well with you these days and for the record, coconut milk in a can works wonders in curry.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Well, I'm glad you finally found the curry mix! You've been looking for it for ages...

    But be an English thing because I don't know any Chinese curry actually ;)

    ReplyDelete
  12. Hey, Gleds, how are you doing? Not quite so good I see. Still hang in there, depression is a bummer but I hope it passes soon.

    Take care of yourself and your furry friends.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Nicole: o yeah you're dead right. Sorry I should have made that more clear. It's definitely not something they eat in Asia (I would presume)

    Crushed: I'm working on Chinese dumplings.. never tried the ones with meat INSIDE.. woo!!

    Kahshe: congratulations on moving. You know that is 2nd only most stressful to divorce..?

    Akelamalu: reasonably!

    ReplyDelete
  14. Baino: mice are a plague though!

    Isn't szechuan glorified sweet and sour?

    Also I found it weird how after that earthquake in the province, BBC journalists had so much trouble pronouncing consistently something that's on every Chinese takeaway menu the length and bredth of this fair country!!

    Lucinda: ;->...

    Janice: honey's meant to go really well in stew..

    FireBird: ha! I used to chase it now I just got stung by the "Killer B"...

    ReplyDelete
  15. Eileen: yeah I'm chasing the best form of coconut these days...

    Zhu: has to be though I once had a v similar JAPANESE curry in a Japanese restaurant in Soho called Zipangu

    JMB: surviving tho, ta!

    ReplyDelete

For legal reasons, comments that incite hatred, racism, issue threats or include personal contact information will be deleted.