Less is more in chickpea world
I've just eaten a really tasty chickpea
curry. Two things were critical to the success, I think. It was left
standing overnight before I ate it, which probably helped no end,
letting the flavours develop. I didn't get tempted into over
complicating things. There was just half an onion (the other half
went into BLISS' ariabata – more on that later), I didn't skimp on
the fresh chilli or garlic, or ginger, but then used just one small
measure each of turmeric, garam masala, and mixed cumin and coriander
powders. Moistened with a little bit of vegetable stock. Not too
moist. Quite a stiff consistency. Quite dry.
It came out really well, the best I've
managed at home.
I ate it with a turkey chipotle and
lime job, that was searingly hot. “A little jar of ASDA own brand
chilli and lime paste”, I thought, “how hot is that going to be?”
[Answer, with hindsight – pretty damn hot]. So I put in an
additional nine green chillies. To give it a bit more pep, to up the
oomph, to deepen the heat, a tad.
It almost burnt my brains out.
My eyes were watering, my nose was
running, and when I went outside, the neighbour's rooftop
photovoltaic array had the national grid meters spinning and
everything lit up like a very bright thing.
So I ate the leftover nuclear chipotle
and turkey supernova with the chickpeas (including just the three
green chillies) on he side to cool it down.
Hence BLISS' over hot ariabata. I put
in just a dash of cayenne and a smidge of paprika, and I did taste
it, just the sauce, without the pasta or any grated cheese, and
thought it had a pleasant, low-level heat to it.
I guess asking me to test whether her
dinner is too hot is like asking a heroin addict whether that cup of
espresso it doing much for him. It's impossible to tell. There's
something addictive about chillies, and when there's a nice big bag
of those hot green ones in the fridge, I can't imagine cooking
anything without using some of them. Why would you?
They must constitute part of one of the
seven a day we're supposed to eat now. In conjunction with fresh
ginger, garlic and coriander leaves, that little lot, working
together, must amount to one of the seven, surly?
Oil City Confidential
A documentary of stars: Wilko Johnson
(a beautifully insane man, a genius), Lee Brilleaux, and his widow,
The Big Figure, John B Sparkes. Canvey Island, Essex's Dungeness,
with oil instead of nuclear power. The Feelgoods playing live. I was
desperate to see them in the 70's, but it never worked out, somehow.
Jake Riviera, who's Stiff Records marketed that “Kill Time / Murder
Success” wall-clock. There's the Shepherds Bush Empire, the other
small London music pubs where they regularly played. Brilleaux's
beautiful mum, her shaky old lady voice, saying they went to see the
Feelgoods play a big gig, and “although we didn't really understand
it, we couldn't sleep all night afterwards, we were so excited”.
They must've been in their forties or fifties.
Julian Temple produced the film. It
moves along almost too quickly. It flies past, it's over too soon.
Wilko Johnson talking about playing
45's at 33 rpm, working out how to play simultaneous rhythm and lead
on the same guitar...shivers down the spine.
Things unravel at the end,
personalities that work too close, too hard, for long enough, will be
at risk of falling out.
Among the closing footage is the
remaining Feelgoods playing the Lee Brilleaux memorial gig, and
loving it.
http://www.songkick.com/concerts/17080599-dr-feelgood-at-concorde-2
ReplyDeleteThanks - going to watch that today...
ReplyDelete