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I'm a big curry aficionado and am trying to cook curries that both taste good and require minimal preparation during the week. I like to make both vegetarian (usually, green/red lentils, fresh) and chicken-based curries.

For that reason, I'm starting by blending the masalas, tomatoes, onions, etc, in a blender, frying, adding the rest of the ingredients, adding water, and then reducing until finished.

I've noticed that both the tubers and the lentils cook very slowly using this method.

If the blended mix is particularly thick (e.g., it includes the tubers themselves or ground nuts), I've found that it hardly cooks at all.

I've figured that the problem has to do with the viscosity of the cooking medium (starches obviously make it the most 'gluggy') and feel that things would work much better if I cooked the lentils in water and then transferred, once cooked, into the sauce, but the recipes I've read all use the all-in-one method that I'm following without much success.

In addition to not cooking, things seem to require very frequent stirring and sticking is a big problem.

Is there any solution to this?

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  • It's also possible that part of the problem is acidity from the tomatoes. Acids can slow down how quickly some vegetables soften (eg, onions & potatoes)
    – Joe
    Commented Apr 4, 2016 at 15:05
  • @Joe interesting - in my experience, acid does not "slow down", they just don't soften when they're cooked.
    – rumtscho
    Commented Apr 4, 2016 at 15:46
  • Have you tried using a non stick pot (and probably lowering the heat a bit) as a solution to the sticking problem, and/or is this an unwanted/unacceptable solution for another reason? Commented Jun 17, 2016 at 8:45

3 Answers 3

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This answer presumes your worry is that by not putting in the pulses/tubers from the beginning, you're actually not ending up with the "correct" result.

My experience with recipes (even from reputable sources) with regard to slow cooked, stewy dishes, with ingredients that take time before they're done, is that they're either short on time, or short on liquids. Either that, or I'm bad with measuring, use ingredients of lesser quality, or suck at cooking (most of the time I suspect the latter two are the guilty parties).

But most likely (and here's the good part), the pulses/tubers are there from the beginning to act not only as a nutritional component, but also serve a dual function as thickener. They're most definitely (IMHO) not there from the beginning to impart flavor to the curry.

So one of the solutions you've already found yourself: Cook the pulses/tubers separately, and add them in the end. The curry will not suffer any loss in flavor. If it's to thin, either squish some of pulses so the starches can thicken it, or reduce a bit longer.

Second solution: Start out with more liquid than the recipe prescribes, and cook/reduce longer, until the desired thickness has been achieved.

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It sounds like you are simply making your curry base way too thick. In cooking heat transfers through contact and convection. You use contact when frying things, but when you need a slower cooking process you want convection, where the circulation of the liquids transfers heat from the pan surface through the food. When your base is too thick the heat will not readily circulate away from the pan's surface, and all the heat gets transferred to the food adjacent to the surface, and it burns. You need some more water in there.

I'd avoid blending starches into your curry base, it will make things way too thick and sludgy, and the starches will burn easily and create off flavors. You want to be able to fry off your blended base to get maillard reactions, adding potatoes will not give you the result you want there. If you want to add starch do it once you have fried off your base and added liquid, or if you want a thicker curry then pre-cook the potatoes and add them in at the end.

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  • Heh, missed that part. Indeed, definitely do not put starches in the base. Initially, you're building up a sauce, not a meal. Commented Apr 4, 2016 at 16:30
  • Thanks for the excellent explanation, @GdD - knowing the science helps explain what's been going on. I tried a curry without the tubers in the sauce base last night and the result was much better. Guess sometimes there just aren't any shortcuts. Commented Apr 5, 2016 at 9:03
  • Even aside from the starches, consider that lentils and other dried legumes absorb several times their volume of water. Putting them into a curry without first soaking them will cause them to absorb the moisture out of your sauce. More water is definitely a good call. I generally soak lentils and peas for two hours before using them, regardless of what the recipe says; they are mild enough to take on the tastes of the dish during the recipe-cooking.
    – Shalryn
    Commented Apr 6, 2016 at 1:10
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Here are some tips:

1) Don't make a paste of the onions and tomatoes. Instead keep a ready supply of finely chopped onions, tomatoes, ginger, garlic and green chilies. You can quickly shallow fry these in oil and cumin / mustard a large steel ladle which most Indian kitchens carry . IT looks like this:

enter image description here

Ground onions are difficult to cook - they take too much oil and time and most times will leave a raw acidic flavour in your food. They also cause the viscosity you are referring to unless they are fried in a lot of oil.

2) Buy a stainless steel pressure cooker which can soften your lentils / potatoes / chicken / veggies (brand Hawkins / Prestige). Not only does it quick cook stuff , it also pressurizes the flavour of the curry into your chicken / lentils making it a lot tastier. Please learn how to use it - it can be tricky with water estimation and whistle timing.

Now let's say you wanted to make curried lentils - just pressure cook your lentils with a little salt and turmeric. Then prepare your seasoning with onions, topmatoes, cumin seeds, ginger, garlic and dried red chillies and pour it over your cooked lentils and stir it all together. If you prepare the seasoning in Ghee (unclarified butter) instead of oil, the lentils will taste amazing.

Alternately, you can prepare the seasoning in the pressure cooker, then toss in the soaked lentils, pour water and set your lid to pressure cook all of it - this approach is the best for cooking chicken curry, vegetables like beans and carrots.

Happy to answer follow up questions.

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