How do you feel about Indian food?
How do you feel about Indian food?
It's pretty good, I like it every now and then. Not all the time though.
Better than Finnish food
Filled with spices to hide rot.
the fecal matter adds flavour
my favourite cuisine along with Thai
Love it
Haven't been able to make it taste like the restaurants at home though.
never had any but I'm usually not a fan of "just drown everything in sauces and spices bro lol"
love it
simple as
very good when served by non-indian people
based taste
I have this issue too
this. obviously better than our cuisine, but 3 days in succession would be the limit for me.
I don't really like it.
I hate it
Too many onions and vegetables
Too much shit covered in sauce that I cannot identify
Gives me the shits the next day too
I love it. I even made friends with some indian (nepali) chefs when i was in university.
i have some chicken and rice. what to do with it?
shit taste brits
as usual
Love it, yummy yummy I want it all in my tummy
...
>grind your own spices
>add fresh herbs
>lots of cream/dairy/butter
>simmer the saucy dishes for a long time
might help make it closer
Love it but it's too expensive here for what it is.
very tasty but pricey in general
come here and I'll throw you a feast for 4 4people 10 euros.
Reminder that most countries don't even have Indian restaurants apart from the UK, messed up
how much would large bowl of paneer masala and a kilo of garlic naan cost in India?
>a kilo of garlic naan
you don't get a kilo of it lol.
you get it in sets of 3.
I don't usually eat North Indian food outside since I can cook it at home
but as far as I know, you can get it under 10$.
literally my favourite kind
I mean 10 euros.
Plus if you want a bit of variety in your plant, you can still get a lot of things to fill it up under 10 euros.
I don't Main Indian dishes out a lot so I might be a bit off.
don't want it anywhere near me.
damn, small bowl of masala cost more than 10 usd alone here
i wish indian food is more popular and cheaper here
Learned recently that tikka masala isn't real Indian food but was invented in the UK. Next time I go to a good Indian restaurant, what should I take? I like sweet sour and spicy, can take spice up to Chinese level, but probably not the spiciest Indian foods
If you don't like spicy food don't bother going to an Indian imo. If you're not in the UK then everything will just be curries, indian cuisine does have some non spicy stuff but you won't find that in restaurants you'll have access to
I like spicy but only up to a certain level. I can take the spiciest Chinese food but I think that's nowhere near Indian in terms of spiciness, which is why I ask.
Should I start a channel to teach anons how to make restaurant tier Indian food?
I live in Sweden so I have never been to a deli, or tasted Indian food.
Yes please
its delicious
Do you know simple chicken curry recipe?
Yeah Chinese food is really nothing compared to nearly everything from India heat wise, the whole tikka masala thing happened because westerners can't/couldn't handle most authentic Indian food. If you have restaurants specific to certain areas of the subcontinent, northwest India might be a good one for you because its a lot of grilled meat and its not as spicy. However I think as a general rule, if its not milk/cream based and its not spicier than a Chinese then its not 'authentic'
Im addicted to it but it got me an acne
i would watch it
but the main problem is the ingredient is quite hard to find
Spicy, rare, not cheap.
Are there any real finnish specialties that weren't borrowed from Sweden?
Get yourself a very spicy sauce, make it yourself to achieve the expected amount of hotness.
Cook chichken in this sauce.
put it all together with rice