Home > Books & Magazines > Printed Book >

The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Restaurant Meals at Home - Kris Dhillon


 The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Restaurant Meals at Home - Kris Dhillon Printed Book
amazon

The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Restaurant Meals at Home - Kris Dhillon

 
Description: ISBN 0716021919 / Genre: Food & Drink / Dieting / Author: Kris Dhillon / Edition: Re-issue / Paperback / 128 Pages / Book is published ... more
The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Restaurant Meals at Home - Kris Dhillon ... 2008-03-27 by Right Way

Newest Review: ... the food they might enjoy in an Indian Restaurant. Although the author doesn't specify presumably this refers to the style of ... more

 ... cooking that is most popular in Indian restaurants in Britain. The breakdown of chapters starts with the usual introduction to herbs and spices, some nibbles and then presents the Curry Sauce - the base of most of the recipes in the book, or, The Curry Secret. This sauce, according to Kris Dhillon, is made in large quantities in restaurants and provides the sought-after depth of flavour in any really good curry. To make it is a pretty simple, if time-consuming and smelly process. One of the best things about t...more

Price Comparison for The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Res...

The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real IndianRestaurant Meals at Home ...
Pages: 128, Edition: Re - issue, Paperback, Right Way
Last Update 08.12.2009 06:07
£ 3.96
Free!


within 24 hours
The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Restaurant Meals at Home - Kris Dhillon go shopping
 

Read Reviews for The Curry Secret: How to Cook ...

Cosmokat
Premium Review The Curry Secret: How to Cook Real Indian Restaurant Meals at Home - Kris Dhillon: Share the Secret (448 words)
by - written on 19/09/09 (Very useful, 79 readings)
Rating:

I apologise but I can't avoid the biggest cliché of them all here - this book changed my life. This book provided me with the recipe for which I had been searching for a long time. Like many of us, I am addicted to Indian Food, and find it difficult to exist for long without craving a curry fix. Eating out at various Indian Restaurants is one of my favourite things to do; sadly I don't manage to do this very often. I also love to cook, and happily a fellow curry fiend bought me this book as a gift. The book itself aims to allow the reader to recreate the food they might enjoy in an Indian Restaurant. Although the author doesn't specify ...  Read the complete review

 

Products similar to The Curry Secret: How to Cook ...

Simple, stunning recipes Desserts chaptersometimes unoriginal

One or two useful bits, visually very attractive Not in depth enough, annoying "hip" language

You can impress your friends. Not for those who like bland food.

good food, easy to follow ~~~~

Easy to follow, lots of pictures, variety of recipes Bit fiddly to keep open, recipes are mostly reprints from magazine

really good, simple ideas none that I can think of

More products in Printed Book

Leith's Cookery School - Prue Leith and Caroline Waldegrave
The complete teach yourself to cook posh food book Some menus are a bit expensive to produce

How to Survive Summer Camp - Jacqueline Wilson
Fairly easy to read, excellent characters. Probably not that different to books from the same author.

The Norton Anthology of Poetry
A huge array of poems, good footnotes Heavy!thin pages

Artemis Fowl: The Graphic Novel - Eoin Colfer
See text See text

Hunchback of Notre-Dame, The - Victor Hugo
Great storyline, brilliant use of language. Bit slow to start but you have to really look at how the scene is set to enjoy.

Against the Odds - James Dyson
A handy read and insight into how it began; cheap prices A few annoying traits of constant put downs for other manufacturers

A Man On The Moon - Andrew Chaiken
Photo gallery, Astronaut bibliography, Index none

The Satanic Verses - Salman Rushdie
Brilliant language, makes you think Disconnected narrativeambiguous ending

What Every Body Is Saying - Joe Navarro
see review see review

The Girl Who Played with Fire - Stieg Larsson
Thrilling, intelligent Excessive detail

Advantages and disadvantages from the dooyooCommunity
 
Top