Most of the dry ground in the southwest part of the Everglades is based on oyster shell mounds. Some of them dozens of acres, tens of feet high.They thought of it waaaaay back.
In fact, they ate so many that we find the places where they tossed the shells all over Denmark.
Køkken mødding in Danish, translates to Kitchen midden:
There was a Canadia cat that showed us a video of it here.Ever try making your own charcoal? Seems like a natural for a tree guy.
I like to add Thai chilies, fresh if you can find them. The original Siracha is good and a hot sauce called Da Bomb if you want real heat but adds little flavor. Cayenne is good but to me brings a slightly off flavor IMO. Plus butter chicken is traditionally not a spicy(hot) dish more creamy and flavorful.Dominoes. Our local one offers hatch green chilies as a topping now, and my wife is hooked.
Ya know, she's a phenomenal cook, absolutely top tier. But she likes eating out. She says she's lazy. Not me, I didn't say that, but she does.
Also @flushcut brother she needs help with both her Tikka masala and her buttered chicken. The flavor is right, so far as we can tell, but it's not spicy enough. Cayenne? What? HELP US PLEASE!
Thanks Rajan!I like to add Thai chilies, fresh if you can find them. The original Siracha is good and a hot sauce called Da Bomb if you want real heat but adds little flavor. Cayenne is good but to me brings a slightly off flavor IMO. Plus butter chicken is traditionally not a spicy(hot) dish more creamy and flavorful.
With all Indian cooking add the whole dry spices first to the hot dry pan and toast them before adding gee(clarified butter) add your onions and tomatoes reduce to low heat and carmalize the crap out of that mixture. Once the onions are a snotty brown looking color and the tomatoes are just about paste like consistency then you add your other ingredients. That technique will cover the base for many Indian dishes. In both masala and butter chicken use plain unsweetened yogurt as the cream.