- A1: 8 tablespoon of oil or butter (I prefer a mix of both)
- A2: 2 big or 4 small bay leaves
- A3: 2/3 cinnamon sticks - smashed/thrashed
- A4: 2 table spoons sugar
- A5. 8 cloves smashed garlic
- A6. 4 green chillies chopped
- B1. 1 kg finely chopped onions
- B2. 4 tsps (heaped) haldi (turmeric)
- B3. 1 tsp flat (or less) red chilli powder
- B4. 1 tbsp garam masala
- C1. 50 gms (5 cm) smashed ginger
- C2. 1 kg cubed lamb (preferably on the bone from the rump area)
- C3: 1.5 tsp tamarind paste (use 2 tbsp lime/lemon juice as replacement); Note colour won't be very black if using lime juice
- D1: 1.5 tsp salt (or to taste)
- D2. OPTIONAL: Potato big (3 cm chunky pieces with skin on)
Method
- A items: (7 minutes)
Heat oil in a pan large enough to allow stirring well.
Add sugar, bay leaf, cinnamon powder, garlic, chopped chillies
Stir couple of second (just to flavour the oil without burning) - B items (8 minutes)
Add chopped onion and stir for a few minutes
(Maintain enough heat to ensure that onions fry and not boil)
Add haldi, chilli powder and garam masala powder and stir for a couple of minutes - C items (30 minutes)
Add ginger (from now on you have to stir every few minutes as ginger sticks to the base)
Add lamb - stir; lamb will release water. Stir until water is fully released.
Add tamarind paste,
Then cover for 20 minutes (stirring once in a while)
After 15 minutes check lamb if is cooked (chewy - not over cooked)
If gravy is dry and lamb is not cooked add half a cup of water (and repeat until lamb is cooked). - D items (20 minutes)
Add salt; Add optional potatoes; Lower heat to a simmer and dry out the gravy until you see 'oil/butter' like dry consistency - don't over cook. Keep stirring all the time to avoid the burning/sticking to the base.
1 comment:
Drool, drool. Will try it out and report back. I don't think Bapi has ever favoured us with this particular delicacy.
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