
Vindaloo Curry Recipes and Information |
VindalooVindaloo is a popular Indian Curry food dish. It was first brought to Goa by the Portuguese and soon became a pleasing spicy Goan curry meal often served during special occasions. Historically this was a pork dish cooked with plenty of wine vinager and garlic, known as "Vinha d'Alho".
However it soon received the Goan treatment of adding plentiful amounts of spice and chilli. Restaurants often serve this dish with chicken or lamb sometimes mixed with potatoes. Traditional vindaloos curries do not include potatoes, the discrepancy arising because the word "aloof" means "potato" in Hindi. |
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Want hot Curry? Try Vindaloo !Speakers of English have known about this hot curry dish at least since 1888, when W. H. Dawe explained it in The Wife's Help to Indian Cookery, published in London: "Vindaloo or Bindaloo--A Portuguese Karhi.... The best Vindaloo Curry is prepared in mustard-oil.... Beef and pork, or duck can be made into this excellent curry." The basic component of a vindaloo Curry is the vindaloo Curry paste, often made separately ahead of time. This curry paste is a mixture of hot spices and vinegar, cooked in oil over low heat for a few minutes. One curry recipe calls for cayenne, cumin, turmeric, ground coriander, black pepper, hot mustard powder, ground ginger, and cinnamon. You can make a vindaloo curry by adding this paste to any meat or vegetable dish, such as mutton, lamb, chicken, prawns, or peas pulao. Or how about Goanese Fiery Duck Curry in Vindaloo Sauce? In contemporary English, vindaloo can mean more than food. A hot young Japanese politician, Ms. Makiko Tanaka, was described by an Australian newspaper as "all vindaloo." And for the World Cup soccer tournament of 1998, a British group calling itself "Fat Les" supported their team with a hit song: "Vin-da-loo! Vin-da-loo! And we all like vin-da-loo! We're gonna score one more than you!" Alex James, one of the singers, declared that it was "a post-modern tribute to multiculturalism." As Dawe stated in 1888, vindaloo curry is actually Portuguese in origin, though it comes from the Indian subcontinent. The name too is ultimately Portuguese, from the phrase vinho de alho or "wine of garlic." Portuguese sailors brought their garlic-flavored vinegar stew to Goa, which from 1510 to 1961 was a Portuguese colony on the southwestern coast of India. The Goans spiced up the recipe and the name, making it vindaloo in their Konkani language, a member of the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family. The English tongue has only vindaloo from Konkani. |
Lamb vindalooA delicious curry in the true Indian style.Serves 4
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VindalooHeat the oil in a fry pan and sauté the onions until transparent but not burnt.
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