Welcome to our year of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet, a new catering service out of East Thetford, Vermont. Over the years Ryon's dad, Barry (the Barefoot Gourmet himself; check him out at barefoot-gourmet.com), has given his children, along with several of their well deserving friends, many of his recipes that are now famous among their circle. After receiving the latest additions, the cookbook includes about 111 recipes! The exact number is still a little fuzzy. As a New Year adventure, we decided to make our way through the entire cookbook. Yes, we have decided to cook (well Ryon to cook, Caitlin to eat) ALL of the BFG's recipes. We will blog regularly about the successes and tragedies of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet and maybe add in a little about what is going on down here in C'Ville. Keep us posted on your attempts at the recipes...and don't forget, food tastes better when made with a wooden spoon and eaten with good company. Enjoy!

-Ryon and Caitlin

Monday, January 4, 2010

#2: Curry

By Ryon - Last night I cooked a curry. This is a perfect weekend cooking endeavor because this recipe takes a few hours from start to finish. Plus, the curries always taste better if you let them sit for a night or two in the fridge (or stored in the freezer), making it a great mid-week meal when you don't feel like cooking.
I will have to get Ivor and Abigail to send some curries back here when they are in South Africa. As delicious as this recipe is, it is always somewhat of a disappointment to me because I'm not cooking with the Durban curry powders, or "Durbs Masala" as dad refers to in the recipe. They do not have that "particular aroma" and taste that dad's curries always have. A while back I purchased the Indra brand curry powder at a local Asian market and have used this in all of the curries I have made to date. It has a good flavor, but is slightly dull compared to the fresh South African curry powders. I'm sure there must be a comparable curry powder here somewhere... I have just not found it yet.
Beef, chicken, or lamb can be used for this recipe. I tend to use chicken, although I love lamb curries and will probably use it next time I make this. Chicken is cheap and, after cooking for a long time, is fall-off-the-bone delicious. For those of you who do not like bones in your curry, just pick up a package of boneless thighs. I have found that to be the easiest and most flavorful alternative to using a whole chicken.
I have found one important element to be missing from this recipe, and it is something that took me a few tries to figure out. The first few times that I made this recipe, the curry was totally lacking in spicy heat. I initially thought I was just not using enough curry powder and steadily ramped up the dosage on each attempt. To no avail. Eventually I figured out (actually, I think I just asked dad) that you need to add hot PEPPERS to the mix. This may not have been included in the recipe because the Durbs Masala has some heat to it, I think. The stuff I'm using does not. So be aware that if you like hot curries and you are using a non-spicy curry powder, throw a few peppers into this recipe. I added two jalapenos and two serranos into this one... and yikes... it's hot.
As you can see from the pictures, this is a colorful concoction and it tastes even better than it looks. Caitlin and I had this right away last night for dinner served over rice with a spicy mango chutney (in my opinion, a must-have when eating curries). We both had it again for lunch today. It's amazing either way, but it definitely gets better, and spicier, if you wait. Of the recipes I have cooked out of the book since we've had it, this is in my top five.

Rating: RHC

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