Made Butter Chicken the other day.
Pretty damn good!
Didn't have all the spices recommended but I had 90% of them or so.
The recipe didn't specify how much water, so after I blended the sauce and ran it through a strainer it came out a lllliiiittttttttttllllllleeee bit thicc. But was still delicious. This seems to be a common problem I've had making Indian dishes, the sauces always come out way thicker than I expect, because there's so much dense, blended goodness in them. But now I know that the key to many Indian dishes and their sauces is to really finely puree them and strain them, so they come out with that magical velvety smoothness. I've done a less thorough job in the past making stuff like this and yeah....the difference is real.
That said, I need to start researching Garam Masala. I've used a bag of stuff I got from the store and everything comes out tasting....kind of similar because of it. But there's so many different ways to do Garam Masala that I don't honestly know what it *should* taste like.
I finally got around to making tollatsch yesterday, and while everything else worked well, the schweineblut had partly coagulated while thawing and the texture was closer and lumpier than I'd have liked as a result of the requisite blending. Is there a better way to thaw ~300 mL of pig blood than immersion in warm water, or do people just strain it?
Maybe puree it in a blender then strain it? Would at least break up the lumps.