For instance, it came in rather handy when making a Keralan black pepper goat curry. This recipe makes a paste of fried onions, curry leaves and peppercorns and adds it to the goat meat frying in a bunch of
The curry was delicious - but I think I should have cracked the peppercorns in the mortar and pestle before adding them to the blender. They stayed pretty much intact and didn't add the flavour that I think they should have.
For dessert I made some baked buttermilk custards, pretty much using this recipe but using buttermilk instead of cream and flavouring it with some of my calamondins in brandy. I figured that in Indian cooking there is a pretty strong heritage of reduced milk desserts and yoghurty things, so a buttermilk custard was just a short step away.
I've always wanted to try goat, is it anything like lamb?
ReplyDeleteI haven't had goat either, your dinner sounds very fragrant and savoury though - I think you would win me over.
ReplyDeleteI love your adventurousness in the kitchen and can't wait to see what you will joust with for the Caribbean Royal Foodie Joust.
ReplyDeleteSam - very much like lamb. Kid is like milk fed lamb, older goat like mutton. This was wild goat so it was more like mutton.
ReplyDeleteNatashya - I've got a goat leg too, so it'll be roasted Greek style. You'll love it!
Rachel - I'm away for a few weeks so there will be no jousting.
Wow!
ReplyDeleteI want some of this.
With a glass of Zinfandel please.
I wish we could get goat more readily here.
Hi from Malaysia, WOW! Goat curry :-) how exotic!
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting my blog ...
MrOrph - zinfandel would be a great accompaniment! Yum!
ReplyDeleteThanks Julian!
Yea--my hand blender is one of my favorite things! Your curry looks delicious. Love curry and the black pepper--yum!
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