Home & Garden3 mins ago
Cauliflower Rice
9 Answers
Does this live up to the hype? It seems a good substitute for rice to have with a curry.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by 237SJ. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'd never heard of it but the reviews here might interest you:
http:// www.bbc goodfoo d.com/r ecipes/ caulifl ower-ri ce
In particular, one says "Consistency more like cous cous than rice", which is what I would expect from using cauliflower. Although I like cous cous with Moroccan dishes, I'm not sure that I'd like it (or something similar to it) with Asian curries; I like my rice to be fairly firm.
http://
In particular, one says "Consistency more like cous cous than rice", which is what I would expect from using cauliflower. Although I like cous cous with Moroccan dishes, I'm not sure that I'd like it (or something similar to it) with Asian curries; I like my rice to be fairly firm.
Definitely. Cauliflower is an ideal accompaniment to curry. I have a great curry recipe which involves making a minced beef curry sauce and stuffing it between the florets of a boiled cauliflower and then baking it. Fantastic.
Cauliflower Bhaji is great as well. Batter made with Duram flower (chick pea) and deep fried.
Cauliflower Bhaji is great as well. Batter made with Duram flower (chick pea) and deep fried.
Retrocop - if you like curries, I can recommend this http:// www.ang loindia nchef.c o.uk/
237SJ
Thank you for that link. Very much appreciated. I love curry.I also use this on line curry emporium especially for Pukkah pappadums. Sharwoods are rubbish.
:-)
http:// www.spi cesofin dia.co. uk/acat alog/Gr oundSpi ces.htm l?kw=in dian%20 spice&a mp;fl=6 50369
Thank you for that link. Very much appreciated. I love curry.I also use this on line curry emporium especially for Pukkah pappadums. Sharwoods are rubbish.
:-)
http://
Retrocop - I have a book called the Curry Secret which has recipes for Indian restaurant cooking which is very different from Indian home cookery. As you probably know, Indian restaurants make a gravy base from onion, ginger and garlic. It takes ages to boil down. Then they add spices to make a basic curry sauce. Then they add the appropriate spices according to which curry the customers order. That is why they can knock up a curry so quickly. The guy on that website that I linked has found a way to dehydrate the basic curry gravy. There are quite a lot of premixed spices that can be bought but to my knowledge, nobody has managed to get the consistencey right. His curries do come out a bit on the hot side though.