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Craft and Cooking (Recipes)
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In praise of the slow cooker.
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It tastes like chicken! :)

My mother taught me to cook these dishes. She was brought up in Burma in the 1920s and 30s and learned to cook from their own cook at home.
One of the great tricks for cooking this and the North Indian equivalent, is a rendering process (which sort of rules out a slow cooker).
To get the spiced sauce really rich, it must be cooked without a cover and you keep adding liquid in small quantities every time it threatens to dry out. In the Indian version you add tamarind water. The theory is that the dish starts by boiling and then slowly turns to frying as it dries out.
That way, the sauce gets thicker and thicker and richer and richer till it is incredibly powerful. In Burma, the dry, oily result is much stronger than the rather weaker western versions we see in this country.
In the north Indian version, the dry beef curry is served with steamed basmati rice, wetted with Pepper water (which you can also drink). I used to love rice and pepper water as a child.



Get one!!
You can do exactly that!
You can pre-prepare the veg on the weekend or whenever you have extra time and just bung it in before you leave for work. Get the seasoning packets/envelope things from the supermarket. Dead cheap if you buy them on offer.


As you're on your own you'd probably only have to cook with it a coupl three times a week, as long as you don't mind eating the same thing a couple nights in a row.
I'd buy one ASAP.
Tell your friends you want one as a housewarming gift. They're not very expensive.

Sorry, lots of questions!!
I'm going to be in a lot for the next few weeks while writing up so maybe a present to myself for finishing my course.... hmmm :)

Except mince of course. If you're using mince, you must cook it until all the pink is gone.
It's great for chilli and bolognaise and stews and soups and and and.

I'm making rustic chicken this time. Nom, nom, nom.
Still got a load left over from yesterday but I was too excited to wait. These 2 dishes should do me for the rest of the week.

Mine had quite a workout over the weekend. I did a big pot of chilli overnight on Friday then chicken overnight on Saturday then simmered the chicken carcass all day yesterday and today for stock.
My freezer is nice n full again. Thank goodness cuz we pretty lived much on toast and pasta last week.


Claire - you don't need a lot of liquid at all - if you look at recipes I think they say some amount of stock that seems stupidly insufficient - but it really will be enough. I use guesswork :D

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00AVAK3F6...

I've heard lots of things about meat and browning or not, would anybody here bother browning sausages? I don't normally for a casserole but... :)


Roast tomorrow then slow cooker....
I love my slow cooker, got chicken casserole bubbling away in there now :-)

I don't like handling raw meat so slow cooker is ideal lol

You spout shite sometimes.


We bought a load of beef yesterday. Had the guy mince 2/3 of it.
Got it home and had to decide what sort of food to transform it into.
I browned the mince, added onion and garlic and divided it into portions for spag bol, chilli and cottage pie. The rest I trimmed for steak n ale casserole. I bunged the casserole into the oven (2 meals), the chilli into the slow cooker (3 meals), the spag bol sauce will go into the slow cooker today when the chilli is done and ready for the freezer. (2 meals) I've frozen the rest of the seasoned mince and will do the cottage pie when required. (2 meals).
So, 18 servings of healthy, home cooked food using about £10 worth of beef.
Rather chuffed, I am.

Here’s what you will need:
125ml soy sauce
150g honey
60 ml rice wine vinegar
1/2 chopped onion
2 garlic cloves
Pepper
1 tsp ground ginger
4 chicken breasts
3 tbsp cornflour
60ml water
Spring onions and sesame seeds to serve
Here’s how you make it:
1) Mix the soy sauce, honey, rice wine vinegar, onion, garlic, pepper and ground ginger together in a small bowl and set aside.
2) Oil the slow cooker and add the chicken breasts. Pour the sauce over the chicken, cover and cook on high for 3-4 hours.
3) Remove and drain the chicken and set aside in a large bowl. Shred thoroughly with two forks.
4) Transfer the leftover sauce into a saucepan and add water mixed with the cornflour. Reduce over a medium heat until thick.
5) Add the chicken to the sauce and mix thoroughly. Serve over a bed of rice with spring onions and sesame
I had all of those on the island and had to give them to friends. :(