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| Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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I have made kebabs from minced lamb with many different spices from around
Asia, particularly India and Lebanon, but have never quite managed to capture the flavours that I have got from the tastiest kebabs, made from minced lamb, in restaurants, which is perhaps best described as slightly porky. I use minced neck of lamb from an Asian supplier, which is what I was advised to do by a chef in an Indian takeaway (when I was working as a kitchen hand). But perhaps there's more to it; I don't suppose the restaurants I am thinking of put pork in....? If so, which cut of pork? It's the meat ingredient, not the spice and vegetable (onion, garlic) ingredient, that I really suspect, although I'd be most interested to hear any advice as regards the spice and vegetable ingredient. I tried mixing (with a food blender) the neck of lamb with a leaner bit of leg of lamb but it turned out just rather a dry kebab. Does anyone know what the secret is? Perhaps charcoal grilling or something? That's the way I had the lamb in the Greek islands (OK, that's not Asia!), and it was truly superb; but still I think the meat ingredient was the key. Cheers, Johnny |
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Be sure to put more fat( lamb fat from tail) it to make it juicy.
and don't over cook it! Johnny wrote: I have made kebabs from minced lamb with many different spices from around Asia, particularly India and Lebanon, but have never quite managed to capture the flavours that I have got from the tastiest kebabs, made from minced lamb, in restaurants, which is perhaps best described as slightly porky. I use minced neck of lamb from an Asian supplier, which is what I was advised to do by a chef in an Indian takeaway (when I was working as a kitchen hand). But perhaps there's more to it; I don't suppose the restaurants I am thinking of put pork in....? If so, which cut of pork? It's the meat ingredient, not the spice and vegetable (onion, garlic) ingredient, that I really suspect, although I'd be most interested to hear any advice as regards the spice and vegetable ingredient. I tried mixing (with a food blender) the neck of lamb with a leaner bit of leg of lamb but it turned out just rather a dry kebab. Does anyone know what the secret is? Perhaps charcoal grilling or something? That's the way I had the lamb in the Greek islands (OK, that's not Asia!), and it was truly superb; but still I think the meat ingredient was the key. Cheers, Johnny |
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On 2006-05-31 21:23:45 +0100, "Johnny" said:
I have made kebabs from minced lamb with many different spices from around Asia, particularly India and Lebanon, but have never quite managed to capture the flavours that I have got from the tastiest kebabs, made from minced lamb, in restaurants, which is perhaps best described as slightly porky. I use minced neck of lamb from an Asian supplier, which is what I was advised to do by a chef in an Indian takeaway (when I was working as a kitchen hand). But perhaps there's more to it; I don't suppose the restaurants I am thinking of put pork in....? If so, which cut of pork? It's the meat ingredient, not the spice and vegetable (onion, garlic) ingredient, that I really suspect, although I'd be most interested to hear any advice as regards the spice and vegetable ingredient. I tried mixing (with a food blender) the neck of lamb with a leaner bit of leg of lamb but it turned out just rather a dry kebab. Does anyone know what the secret is? Perhaps charcoal grilling or something? That's the way I had the lamb in the Greek islands (OK, that's not Asia!), and it was truly superb; but still I think the meat ingredient was the key. Cheers, Johnny It won't be pork. Most of the places you'd associate with the kind of kebabs you're describing have sizeable (if not majority) Muslim populations. I suspect it's a matter of how long the meat has been hung (long is good) and the fat content. You might also want to try using some mutton, rather than lamb. |
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Thanks. You mean there should be higher or lower fat content? Cutting a neck
fillet so it's lean seems to do it good, as far as I can see. I must say that recently I have been experimenting and trying a different cut - not neck - of minced lamb (from an ordinary butcher) and find, this, and also, particularly, grilling on charcoal instead of under an electric grill make a lot of positive difference. How would mutton help? Cheers, Johnny "Andrew" wrote in message news:200607012349088930-thecroft@macunlimitednet... On 2006-05-31 21:23:45 +0100, "Johnny" said: I have made kebabs from minced lamb with many different spices from around Asia, particularly India and Lebanon, but have never quite managed to capture the flavours that I have got from the tastiest kebabs, made from minced lamb, in restaurants, which is perhaps best described as slightly porky. I use minced neck of lamb from an Asian supplier, which is what I was advised to do by a chef in an Indian takeaway (when I was working as a kitchen hand). But perhaps there's more to it; I don't suppose the restaurants I am thinking of put pork in....? If so, which cut of pork? It's the meat ingredient, not the spice and vegetable (onion, garlic) ingredient, that I really suspect, although I'd be most interested to hear any advice as regards the spice and vegetable ingredient. I tried mixing (with a food blender) the neck of lamb with a leaner bit of leg of lamb but it turned out just rather a dry kebab. Does anyone know what the secret is? Perhaps charcoal grilling or something? That's the way I had the lamb in the Greek islands (OK, that's not Asia!), and it was truly superb; but still I think the meat ingredient was the key. Cheers, Johnny It won't be pork. Most of the places you'd associate with the kind of kebabs you're describing have sizeable (if not majority) Muslim populations. I suspect it's a matter of how long the meat has been hung (long is good) and the fat content. You might also want to try using some mutton, rather than lamb. |
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On 2006-07-02 00:06:07 +0100, "Johnny" said:
Thanks. You mean there should be higher or lower fat content? Cutting a neck fillet so it's lean seems to do it good, as far as I can see. I must say that recently I have been experimenting and trying a different cut - not neck - of minced lamb (from an ordinary butcher) and find, this, and also, particularly, grilling on charcoal instead of under an electric grill make a lot of positive difference. How would mutton help? Cheers, Johnny "Andrew" wrote in message news:200607012349088930-thecroft@macunlimitednet... On 2006-05-31 21:23:45 +0100, "Johnny" said: I have made kebabs from minced lamb with many different spices from around Asia, particularly India and Lebanon, but have never quite managed to capture the flavours that I have got from the tastiest kebabs, made from minced lamb, in restaurants, which is perhaps best described as slightly porky. I use minced neck of lamb from an Asian supplier, which is what I was advised to do by a chef in an Indian takeaway (when I was working as a kitchen hand). But perhaps there's more to it; I don't suppose the restaurants I am thinking of put pork in....? If so, which cut of pork? It's the meat ingredient, not the spice and vegetable (onion, garlic) ingredient, that I really suspect, although I'd be most interested to hear any advice as regards the spice and vegetable ingredient. I tried mixing (with a food blender) the neck of lamb with a leaner bit of leg of lamb but it turned out just rather a dry kebab. Does anyone know what the secret is? Perhaps charcoal grilling or something? That's the way I had the lamb in the Greek islands (OK, that's not Asia!), and it was truly superb; but still I think the meat ingredient was the key. Cheers, Johnny It won't be pork. Most of the places you'd associate with the kind of kebabs you're describing have sizeable (if not majority) Muslim populations. I suspect it's a matter of how long the meat has been hung (long is good) and the fat content. You might also want to try using some mutton, rather than lamb. I'd suggest a little more fat. As to the mutton, I tend to find mutton has a richer 'darker' flavour that is more reminiscent of food I've eaten in Turkey. |
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