Lamb Rogan Josh
Posted: 22 Sep 2013, 20:22
(However you want to spell it).
What we had tonight was from a little kit from here:
http://www.thetinytakeaway.com/
I bought it at the Christchurch food festival, ages ago, but it's been too hot, plus we wanted to wait till we had some decent lamb. I bought some at Burley on Friday, boneless shoulder, blimey what good meat! You could smell as soon as I opened the bag that it was 'proper' lamb, older than lovely pink and tender Spring, not like mutton but well-flavoured.
Anyroad, I wasn't too sure about these kits but the tasting at the festival was impressive (I tried the Madras), and Rogan Josh being Bb's favourite that's what I got.
It was really, really good. You can of course make your own mixes, but unless you do them regularly it would be time-consuming and not necessarily cost-effective. The mixes are £1.40 and the Rogan Josh has 9 different spices in it; there was one mix to marinate the meat in and another to cook it with.
What surprised me as that it was better than using a Pataks paste
What we had tonight was from a little kit from here:
http://www.thetinytakeaway.com/
I bought it at the Christchurch food festival, ages ago, but it's been too hot, plus we wanted to wait till we had some decent lamb. I bought some at Burley on Friday, boneless shoulder, blimey what good meat! You could smell as soon as I opened the bag that it was 'proper' lamb, older than lovely pink and tender Spring, not like mutton but well-flavoured.
Anyroad, I wasn't too sure about these kits but the tasting at the festival was impressive (I tried the Madras), and Rogan Josh being Bb's favourite that's what I got.
It was really, really good. You can of course make your own mixes, but unless you do them regularly it would be time-consuming and not necessarily cost-effective. The mixes are £1.40 and the Rogan Josh has 9 different spices in it; there was one mix to marinate the meat in and another to cook it with.
What surprised me as that it was better than using a Pataks paste