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March 2016 - Westy's Chicken Pathia
- Westy
- HABANERO
- Posts: 2240
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 1:31 pm
- Favourite Curries: Chicken Phal
- Location: Bratislava - Slovakia
March 2016 - Westy's Chicken Pathia
(This recipe can be found in the recipe section here - Admin)
Chicken Pathia
Hot , sweet and sour - full flavoured curry
Serves 2 hearty eaters or 3 watching their figures:
Chicken Pathia
Hot , sweet and sour - full flavoured curry
Serves 2 hearty eaters or 3 watching their figures:
- Attachments
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- Westy's Pathia
- image.jpeg (107.94 KiB) Viewed 26917 times
A curry can never be ‘too garlicky’ or ‘too hot’ .....
- Greybeard
- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1604
- Joined: Wed Oct 07, 2015 11:18 pm
- Favourite Curries: Dopiaza, Kashmiri, Madras or Garlic chicken
- Location: Somewhere north of Watford but south of Inverness
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
That looks superb Westy, we desperately need smell-o-vision + taste-o-vision on this forum.
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
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- BHUT JOLOKIA
- Posts: 4354
- Joined: Mon Jul 29, 2013 8:38 am
- Favourite Curries: Chicken Vindaloo
- Location: Warrington, North West England
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Does look good Westy. With that amount of (Sharwoods) Mango Chutney and Sugar you must like the balance of Pathia in favour of Sweet.
- Westy
- HABANERO
- Posts: 2240
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 1:31 pm
- Favourite Curries: Chicken Phal
- Location: Bratislava - Slovakia
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Thanks rs - it's nicely balanced actually ( for my taste at least ) - usually I shy away from sweet . There is enough lemon juice and tamarind to more than compensate for the mango chutney I reckon - I would agree it's full flavoured though !
A curry can never be ‘too garlicky’ or ‘too hot’ .....
- charliebir
- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1287
- Joined: Tue May 26, 2015 2:45 pm
- Favourite Curries: Pathia, Garlic Chilli, Madras.
- Location: Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
- seafret
- HABANERO
- Posts: 2328
- Joined: Sun Feb 09, 2014 10:13 pm
- Favourite Curries: Chicken madras, King prawn bhuna, mushroom pakoras
- Location: North York Moors
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Delicious sounding and great looking curry Westy. Have you been working at this recipe for a while?
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- ScotchBonnet
- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1653
- Joined: Sat May 23, 2015 6:54 pm
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Certainly looks the part with plenty of runny gravy and authentic chunks of pale chicken. As luck would have it I've just got a few jars of Patak's mango chutney for 89p each.
"There is no such thing as too much oil; just an insufficiency of naan".
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- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1296
- Joined: Sun Mar 17, 2013 4:11 am
- Favourite Curries: Ceylon, Madras
- Location: Perth, WA
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Now that DOES look the business. Another one to try....thanks for sharing Westy
- Westy
- HABANERO
- Posts: 2240
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 1:31 pm
- Favourite Curries: Chicken Phal
- Location: Bratislava - Slovakia
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Thanks Gb - agreedGreybeard wrote:That looks superb Westy, we desperately need smell-o-vision + taste-o-vision on this forum.
Thanks Charlie - it's a tasty winker alrightcharliebir wrote:Looks great, Westy. Photo just "winks" sweet and sour to me
Thanks seafret - I tried a couple of others but I prefer my curries more robustly flavoured and wanted to make a Pathia that left you in no doubt about what you were eatingseafret wrote:Delicious sounding and great looking curry Westy. Have you been working at this recipe for a while?
I've tried Pataks mango chutney and it has a slight gingery flavour that may make an interesting addition - I'd be pleased if you'd try it SBScotchBonnet wrote:Certainly looks the part with plenty of runny gravy and authentic chunks of pale chicken. As luck would have it I've just got a few jars of Patak's mango chutney for 89p each.
Thanks BI - if you get around to trying this I'd be very interested in your thoughtsBritish Indian wrote:Now that DOES look the business. Another one to try....thanks for sharing Westy
A curry can never be ‘too garlicky’ or ‘too hot’ .....
- Cory Ander
- SENIOR MODERATOR
- Posts: 9525
- Joined: Sat Mar 02, 2013 3:52 pm
- Favourite Curries: King Prawn Phal
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Looks good, Westy, thank you for sharing your recipe with us
PS: Which "tamarind paste" are you using?
PS: Which "tamarind paste" are you using?
CA (aka Admin)
- Westy
- HABANERO
- Posts: 2240
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 1:31 pm
- Favourite Curries: Chicken Phal
- Location: Bratislava - Slovakia
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Thanks Cory
I'm using this one Cory - not through choice but due to the lack of !. Slovaks are not huge consumers of tamarind I have deduced.
I'm using this one Cory - not through choice but due to the lack of !. Slovaks are not huge consumers of tamarind I have deduced.
- Attachments
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- Tamarind paste
- image.jpeg (74.09 KiB) Viewed 26857 times
A curry can never be ‘too garlicky’ or ‘too hot’ .....
- Alchemist
- BHUT JOLOKIA
- Posts: 4581
- Joined: Fri Oct 18, 2013 7:50 am
- Favourite Curries: Lamb Jalfrezi
- Location: West Yorkshire, England
March 2016 - Westy's Chicken Pathia
Thanks to Greybeard for selecting this month's recipe, which can be found here.
As usual, please post your wonderful efforts into the recipe thread above. Good luck and enjoy!
As usual, please post your wonderful efforts into the recipe thread above. Good luck and enjoy!
- Alchemist
- BHUT JOLOKIA
- Posts: 4581
- Joined: Fri Oct 18, 2013 7:50 am
- Favourite Curries: Lamb Jalfrezi
- Location: West Yorkshire, England
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Don't forget this is the Curry Club recipe of the month - so let's see a few attempts at this one!
- Greybeard
- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1604
- Joined: Wed Oct 07, 2015 11:18 pm
- Favourite Curries: Dopiaza, Kashmiri, Madras or Garlic chicken
- Location: Somewhere north of Watford but south of Inverness
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Human beings are strange creatures. We love variety, but hate change. Anything outside our comfort zone for the majority of people, especially in this green and pleasant island – is met with a certain resistance. Sometime though, we lose our English reserve and jump in for the hell of it – and so it was with the Pathia. Which is just as well really, as I am a Scotsman.
Let me explain. There are certain curries with which I am intimately acquainted, and others that I have serious problems with. Pathia is one of them. Why? Apart from the simple fact I have not tried a range of them in Indian BIR restaurants, I don't know what a good one is supposed to taste like. Early on I cooked a Pathia for a friend who is very familiar with the dish, and while he enjoyed it, it was not up to BIR standard. Now this could have fatally scarred my BIR cooking endeavours as I was still a relative novice, but I realised it was my lack of understanding of the qualities of the curry. Hot, sour, sweet. Once I understood that, I could tie in the character of the curry with the ingredients and the technique.
This cooking session was scheduled for last weekend, but due to an unfortunate incident with a food processor blade, the middle finger of my right hand is a bit unwell at the moment. In theory, this should be OK as I am left handed, but I use a kitchen knife with my right. As I was out of reference base, this posed a problem, but by Thursday night after a marathon session (Base + 2 curries + GG paste) and multiple plasters and Steri Strips, I was ready for the off.
Up in the isolated regions of Cumbria, Tamarind paste is not a supermarket staple. Fortunately, Tesco now have a dedicated “foodie” range which includes this, and a jar had already been squirreled away in my ever growing spice stash. Other than that, no modification to the ingredients or measures was made, apart from the reduction of chilli powder from 1 tablespoon to three quarters, due to my better half's scathing comment about my pork vindaloo. I will not repeat it here as I have posted it elsewhere on the forum, but the maxims “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned” and “The female of the species is deadlier than the male” will give you some clue as to the verbal response I received when requesting a rating out of 10 for that dish.
So onto the cook. Provided you can get hold of the ingredients, it is simple to prepare and measure. I used pre-cooked chicken, but in a few minutes you can prepare fresh if you prefer. For someone starting out, there are no real “gotchas”, unlike a vindaloo or some madras's or Kormas where the quantity of spices can be difficult to control at the fry stage due to dryness. I left my largest burner on medium / high throughout, (I did not use my wok burner) simply because I was multitasking and wanted to wander away from the stove for a minute or so to get plates etc. The only point I had to keep an eagle eye on the curry was after adding the tomato paste and water mix, which was a a lot thicker than I usually add (I actually followed the measurements for once rather than going by “chef's guess” which for me is a more watery mix). This did bind to the pan a bit, but the addition of some base soon sorted this out.
I was worried upon pre-serve tasting that this was going to be too hot for my better half. I was originally going to swap the madras for a milder curry powder, but in the end I think I made the right decision to go with the hotter powder, as this gave the curry a nice “middle level” hum. I didn't need to adjust any ingredients prior to serving.
Paula rated this as a 8/10, which I say is a resounding accolade from someone who would only touch Korma when I first met them.
For me, this curry was a revelation. Prior to tonight, I didn't get the whole sweet / sour / hot Indian curry vibe, mainly as I have generally tended to lean towards the hotter end of the spectrum. Monday night was always Phal night. Flat out, Ferrari curry. Discussing with colleagues around the office Pathia is quite popular. And I can see why. When balanced right, it warms you, sweetens you and has that astringent edge that like a good appetizer, demands that you come back for more. I can see why some Pathia fans want to ramp up the heat, but that is the only potential failing of this curry (as a dish, not this recipe). Getting the balance right is tricky, and if you experiment with quantities, especially the sweet / sour / hot ingredients, you will come unstuck unless you know what you are doing. Which, as an apprentice, I succumbed to and got totally wrong. This is not an “in your face” curry, the whole idea is much more subtle. Yes it was hot, but I didn't sweat. Yes it was sour, but the sweetness counteracted that. You can't fake a Pathia. This is a binary curry. You either make a good one, or not. A good curry, yes, but not a Pathia. The fact my wife gave it an 8 says everything. I'll give it a qualified 9, only because I have not had a Pathia in a BIR so I can't vouch for that “real BIR taste”. And I am submitting my membership application to the “Pathia Lover's Club” forthwith, only on the understanding that they have a complete newbie on their hands.
Westy's Pathia is a paradox on a plate. Easy to cook, but with dimensions that suggest an awful lot more effort has gone in to the cooking. Provided of course, you stick to the quantities. Forgive me Westy, but that quarter tablespoon of Kashmiri chilli powder may have saved me from a weekend of living in the shed. Or worse still, potentially having another encounter with the food processor blade - this time clutched in the hands of my wife suffering chilli overdose, used to wreak revenge on the power leads of my rice cooker, spice grinder, hotplate, hand blender and curry station that currently clutter our kitchen and dining room.
Let me explain. There are certain curries with which I am intimately acquainted, and others that I have serious problems with. Pathia is one of them. Why? Apart from the simple fact I have not tried a range of them in Indian BIR restaurants, I don't know what a good one is supposed to taste like. Early on I cooked a Pathia for a friend who is very familiar with the dish, and while he enjoyed it, it was not up to BIR standard. Now this could have fatally scarred my BIR cooking endeavours as I was still a relative novice, but I realised it was my lack of understanding of the qualities of the curry. Hot, sour, sweet. Once I understood that, I could tie in the character of the curry with the ingredients and the technique.
This cooking session was scheduled for last weekend, but due to an unfortunate incident with a food processor blade, the middle finger of my right hand is a bit unwell at the moment. In theory, this should be OK as I am left handed, but I use a kitchen knife with my right. As I was out of reference base, this posed a problem, but by Thursday night after a marathon session (Base + 2 curries + GG paste) and multiple plasters and Steri Strips, I was ready for the off.
Up in the isolated regions of Cumbria, Tamarind paste is not a supermarket staple. Fortunately, Tesco now have a dedicated “foodie” range which includes this, and a jar had already been squirreled away in my ever growing spice stash. Other than that, no modification to the ingredients or measures was made, apart from the reduction of chilli powder from 1 tablespoon to three quarters, due to my better half's scathing comment about my pork vindaloo. I will not repeat it here as I have posted it elsewhere on the forum, but the maxims “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned” and “The female of the species is deadlier than the male” will give you some clue as to the verbal response I received when requesting a rating out of 10 for that dish.
So onto the cook. Provided you can get hold of the ingredients, it is simple to prepare and measure. I used pre-cooked chicken, but in a few minutes you can prepare fresh if you prefer. For someone starting out, there are no real “gotchas”, unlike a vindaloo or some madras's or Kormas where the quantity of spices can be difficult to control at the fry stage due to dryness. I left my largest burner on medium / high throughout, (I did not use my wok burner) simply because I was multitasking and wanted to wander away from the stove for a minute or so to get plates etc. The only point I had to keep an eagle eye on the curry was after adding the tomato paste and water mix, which was a a lot thicker than I usually add (I actually followed the measurements for once rather than going by “chef's guess” which for me is a more watery mix). This did bind to the pan a bit, but the addition of some base soon sorted this out.
I was worried upon pre-serve tasting that this was going to be too hot for my better half. I was originally going to swap the madras for a milder curry powder, but in the end I think I made the right decision to go with the hotter powder, as this gave the curry a nice “middle level” hum. I didn't need to adjust any ingredients prior to serving.
Paula rated this as a 8/10, which I say is a resounding accolade from someone who would only touch Korma when I first met them.
For me, this curry was a revelation. Prior to tonight, I didn't get the whole sweet / sour / hot Indian curry vibe, mainly as I have generally tended to lean towards the hotter end of the spectrum. Monday night was always Phal night. Flat out, Ferrari curry. Discussing with colleagues around the office Pathia is quite popular. And I can see why. When balanced right, it warms you, sweetens you and has that astringent edge that like a good appetizer, demands that you come back for more. I can see why some Pathia fans want to ramp up the heat, but that is the only potential failing of this curry (as a dish, not this recipe). Getting the balance right is tricky, and if you experiment with quantities, especially the sweet / sour / hot ingredients, you will come unstuck unless you know what you are doing. Which, as an apprentice, I succumbed to and got totally wrong. This is not an “in your face” curry, the whole idea is much more subtle. Yes it was hot, but I didn't sweat. Yes it was sour, but the sweetness counteracted that. You can't fake a Pathia. This is a binary curry. You either make a good one, or not. A good curry, yes, but not a Pathia. The fact my wife gave it an 8 says everything. I'll give it a qualified 9, only because I have not had a Pathia in a BIR so I can't vouch for that “real BIR taste”. And I am submitting my membership application to the “Pathia Lover's Club” forthwith, only on the understanding that they have a complete newbie on their hands.
Westy's Pathia is a paradox on a plate. Easy to cook, but with dimensions that suggest an awful lot more effort has gone in to the cooking. Provided of course, you stick to the quantities. Forgive me Westy, but that quarter tablespoon of Kashmiri chilli powder may have saved me from a weekend of living in the shed. Or worse still, potentially having another encounter with the food processor blade - this time clutched in the hands of my wife suffering chilli overdose, used to wreak revenge on the power leads of my rice cooker, spice grinder, hotplate, hand blender and curry station that currently clutter our kitchen and dining room.
Last edited by Greybeard on Sat Mar 12, 2016 11:46 am, edited 2 times in total.
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
- Westy
- HABANERO
- Posts: 2240
- Joined: Thu Mar 21, 2013 1:31 pm
- Favourite Curries: Chicken Phal
- Location: Bratislava - Slovakia
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Wow , that's how to write a review for the Curry Club
Thanks for taking the time to do that Gb - enjoyable as ever to read . I'm very pleased that you tried the recipe and followed it to the letter too ( chilli aside ) . Great photos !.
I'm very pleased as well that you both enjoyed the curry
Thanks for taking the time to do that Gb - enjoyable as ever to read . I'm very pleased that you tried the recipe and followed it to the letter too ( chilli aside ) . Great photos !.
I'm very pleased as well that you both enjoyed the curry
A curry can never be ‘too garlicky’ or ‘too hot’ .....
- Alchemist
- BHUT JOLOKIA
- Posts: 4581
- Joined: Fri Oct 18, 2013 7:50 am
- Favourite Curries: Lamb Jalfrezi
- Location: West Yorkshire, England
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
You have earned yourself a place in the big easy chair in the snug area of the curry club for that write up gb! Once I get some more base made I will be having a go myself. I think I will make a separate portion for myself to experience the full chilli impact.
- Greybeard
- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1604
- Joined: Wed Oct 07, 2015 11:18 pm
- Favourite Curries: Dopiaza, Kashmiri, Madras or Garlic chicken
- Location: Somewhere north of Watford but south of Inverness
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Thanks guys. I do hope the snug comes equipped with real ale, or horror of horror's - a decent red wine. To my utter amusement, I have discovered that my elderly compact camera with a proper flash takes much better curry photos (despite the lower resolution) than any of my mobile devices. So there will be a lot more photos to come ....
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
- ScotchBonnet
- BIRD'S EYE
- Posts: 1653
- Joined: Sat May 23, 2015 6:54 pm
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
When it comes to photo's, the lens is very important. Hence my mega-mega pixel phone camera is worse than my old 1.5 megapixel Fuiji camera with its compact, but very nice, Fujinon lenses. Remember that photos uploaded to this (and many other) sites are often way less than a megabyte in size.
"There is no such thing as too much oil; just an insufficiency of naan".
Re: Westy's Chicken Pathia
Made it, liked it, forgot to take a picture
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