Curry Diary 8/3/2013: Red Wine

So as noted earlier, I’ve got several servings of my Japanese Curry, and each time I make it I reheat it I try tweaking it with another ingreedient.  Today was red wine.

To do this I heated up about 1/4 cup of red wine (Rosemont Estate Shiraz if you’re curious), let it boil for about 10 minutes to get the alcohol out, added a bit more when it reduced more than I expected, and reheated the curry in the same pan, mixing it all together.

The color, obviously, ended up a bit darker.  But how did it taste?

This got interesting.

First, I think the taste of the wine amplified the spices.  Maybe it was the further cooking, but it was “more” than I’d expect that to do based on past experiences.

It did add a definite richness to the sauce, enough to impress me and make me think.  This may be a direction worth exploring.

Clearly a lot of Japanese curries use fruits or fruit juice components.  Also wine, like beer (and other alcohols, but mostly I see wine, beer, and sake used) has a very rich, unique taste due to the ingredients and fermentation progress.  That fruity taste combined with the richness of a fermented product was interesting – and richness has been what I’ve been seeking in my current stage of my quest for curry.

So I’m very much thinking next experiment I’m going to try a 2-to-one ratio of broth to wine and see how it goes.  I think going full-on-wine could really overdo it.  Also, obviously, there are many red wines to choose from so I’ll need to pick an appropriate one.

This also makes me wonder what wine-curry pairings could be done in other forms of cooking.  Dahl perhaps?  Or maybe red wine in one of my baked bean recipes could be delicious as that is spicy.

Very educational and worth trying.

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, nerd and geek culture at http://www.nerdcaliber.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

 

Curry Diary 7/30/2013: Turmeric

I made a mess of curry (well, six separate servings – nearly 7, I think my recipe scales weird) so I could have curry, and so I could tweak it by adding ingredients.  I kind of want to get over that plateau I’m at right now because I’m me.

This by the way is one of my ways to improve cooking I should write on – using leftovers and experimenting on them.

So anyway I added a few dashes of turmeric.  I’ve used it in a few dishes, but am frankly not that knowledgeable about it – I’ve used it out of recipes, not as a tweak.  But I’ve heard of it being used in Japanese Curry so hey, time to learn.

Also it has a fascinating history and some of its components may have health benefits!  So it was time to shake hands with turmeric.

It added some interesting heat, but it didn’t seem to make the flavor more complex or deeper – which is what I’m seeking.  It might be worth swapping out one of the two peppers I use (red and black) for it to see how it affects the flavor at a future date.  Also it’s mild bitterness may play really well with the cocoa powder in a different combination.

So I’m thinking next I should add a bit more maple syrup OR cocoa powder, which appear core to the flavor I’ve gotten so far.  I’ve also wondered about some red wine since I’ve heard of it being used in Japanese Curry as well.  If you have any thoughts, let me know!

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.musehack.com/, nerd and geek culture at http://www.nerdcaliber.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

Curry Diary 7/22/2013: Milestone Curry #3

Well the last time I made curry, I experimented with mixing the Maple Syrup into the roux, not the broth.  It changed the flavor, and got me thinking.  The roux is where the flavors really combine, so what else should go in there?

So this time, I added the cocoa powder to the roux.  Did it make a difference?  Yes, enough to call it a Milestone  It’s a more subtle improvement than I got from adding the Maple Syrup to the roux, but it is a definite improvement.

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