Mild Curry Base
Submitted by MASTER CHEF
British Indian Restaurant style mild curry base with ghee, garlic, curry paste, and curry gravy. The fast home cook’s foundation for making takeaway-style curries in 15 minutes.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
10 minREADY
15 minIf you’ve ever wondered how British Indian restaurants get curries to the table in under 10 minutes, this is the answer. The base sauce (or curry gravy) is made in advance, often in massive batches at the start of service, and finished individual curries get built on top of it. This recipe is the finishing technique. Ghee is heated until it smokes faintly, garlic puree goes in for a 60-second sizzle to bloom the alliums, then the curry paste hits the pan and gets cooked another 2 minutes to wake up the spices. That cooking step matters. Raw curry paste tastes one-dimensional; a quick fry develops the masala flavors and turns the kitchen into something that smells like a real Indian takeaway. The pre-made curry gravy goes in next, scaled to the texture you want (less for a thick, dryish curry; more for a saucy one), then tomato puree for body and brightness. Add your protein or vegetables and finish in a few minutes. This is the system that lets a home cook make curry like a pro.
Pro Tips
- Make the curry gravy ahead. The base sauce takes time, but it freezes well in batches.
- Don’t skip cooking the curry paste in the ghee. Raw paste tastes flat; a 2-minute fry transforms it.
- Use real ghee for the most authentic flavor. Vegetable oil works but doesn’t carry the same nutty aroma.
- Keep your principle ingredients (chicken, paneer, vegetables) in a similar size for even cooking.
- Adjust salt at the end. The base sauce is already seasoned, so taste before adding more.
Variations
- Use Madras curry paste for medium heat, or vindaloo paste for fiery curries. Same technique applies.
- Stir in 2 tablespoons of cream, yogurt, or coconut milk at the end for a richer korma-style finish.
- Add fenugreek leaves (kasuri methi) at the end for that distinctive restaurant aroma.
Ingredients
Directions
Heat the gee, and stir-fry the garlic for 1 minute.
Add the curry paste (or powder made into a paste with water), and stir fry for 2 minutes more.
Add the curry gravy, using less if you want a dryish curry and more for a liquid sauce.
Stir-fry for a couple of minutes then add tomato purée and salt.
To obtain the wateriness you require, either add akhni stock or water to taste.
(You may need to add a little oil as well to keep the correct texture.)
Add your principle ingredients - 1½ lb for 4 people and when hot serve.
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