What's the best bottled Indian sauce?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a raita recipe to share?


Depends if you want a more mild North Indian cucumber raita or a spicier South Indian/Hyderabadi raita. I'm South Indian and ours is pretty simple.

Take roughly 300 mg of a rich yogurt, such as Greek yogurt. Then on a cutting board, chop up 1 green chilli, 1 tomato, 1 medium sized onion and 1 tbsp of cilantro very finely. Add to the yogurt and then add salt to taste. Mix up and serve.



Don't forget cucumber. Key ingredient in summer
Anonymous
I like the Parampara brand. It's a semi dry spice blend that you mix with water or yoghurt before use
Anonymous
Shawoods is the only one that cuts it, however, before adding the sauce to the chicken I pan fry 3 cloves of garlic, half an onion and a small piece of ginger, all finely chopped for approx 5mins until nicely browned on medium heat. Then add the chicken and season in the pan with salt and pepper. Once the chicken is browned add the sauce and about 1/4 teaspoon of chili...leave to simmer for 3-5 mins. Result = Delicious!! Made using Sharwooda tikka masala sauce in a jar.
Anonymous
Kingfisher
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Shawoods is the only one that cuts it, however, before adding the sauce to the chicken I pan fry 3 cloves of garlic, half an onion and a small piece of ginger, all finely chopped for approx 5mins until nicely browned on medium heat. Then add the chicken and season in the pan with salt and pepper. Once the chicken is browned add the sauce and about 1/4 teaspoon of chili...leave to simmer for 3-5 mins. Result = Delicious!! Made using Sharwooda tikka masala sauce in a jar.


I do this too, although I add some coconut milk too because we like creamy curry. Sometimes I use ginger-garlic paste from the ethnic foods store, not sure which one, my MIL buys it.
Anonymous
Hi OP, I’m Indian and I would have to say some of the jarred stuff I’ve tried is pretty bad. However the premise spice blends are great! There are a few prominent brands. If your family really does like Indian food it’s worthwhile to go to Patel or another Indian grocery and stock up on a few. Depending on the dishes you like, you can even find specific blends like biryani masala and so on. I make most of my spice blends but buy some like Everest Pav Bhaji masala, MDH Kitchen King (a garam masala equivalent) and so on. Other PPs have outlined the process for making a sauce pretty well. Also, an Instant Pot is a great tool for Indian cooking! Have fun.
Anonymous
^^premise = pre made
Anonymous
Well, I will say if you are trying to replicate good Indian restaurant fare, no premade sauce will ever come close. I should know, kids love Indian food and I try to make it a lot and had many misses over the years. Sauces I use are edible, and kids like it and eat it. One they like is Aldi's Tikka Masala. Does it taste like restaurant one? Not at all. But, it tastes ok, and they eat it. I do sauté onions and garlic first and add turmeric and some curry powder and a chicken cube, and pepper and hot spur red chilies, well, you get the point. It is pretty tasty, we call it mom's version. I do make curry with dry spices. I do wonder why cant they make a good sauce to taste like one in a restaurant?
Anonymous
This is an excellent spice packet for Chicken Tikka Masala. I love it so much I've put it in family members' stockings at Christmas to spread the love. https://www.amazon.com/Arora-Creations-Organic-Chicken-0-9-Ounce/dp/B001D8RP4C
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Op, I am an Indian. You don't need sauce.
If you have little ginger, garlic, paprika, salt, curry powder (or garam masala), it is easy.

For chicken curry of 2 lbs chicken:
1. Chop a medium -large onion, jalapeno
2. Heat spoon of oil and add cumin seeds, chopped onion and jalapeno.
2. Grate ginger and mince garlic while above is frying. Add them when onions are almost cooked.
3. Cut 2-3 tomatoes and add them to the above fried mixture and fry till the oil leaves.
4. Add cut chicken pieces and brown them.
5. Add paprika, salt and garam masala. Add little water.
6. Let it cook over medium flame. Garnish with cilantro. Adjust spices and if it is spicy add a spoon of yogurt or splash of half and half and cook them.

Serve with rice or roti.


I really appreciate this. Thanks.


+1 I'm making this tonight and my mouth is watering just thinking about it....thanks!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It is a bit thicker and more sour. I don't think the difference is dramatic.


Less viscosity too. I love Costco NOGA brand of Indian Dahi. Better than any plain yogurt I have had here and very much like homemade. It is just milk and the yogurt culture and not other things to force the setting of yogurt.

Anonymous
Not MARSALA. Its MASALA.

MASALA = Spice in Hindi

I am Indian and I cook most meals from scratch, but I also use store bought spice mix, bottled sauce etc. Some good advice is given here.,

1) Patak's Vindaloo paste (jarred bottles) is awesome. Follow the recipe. Most Indian recipes will talk about browning the onions. This is a tricky thing for non-Indians. You have to continually stir to brown it without burning the onions. Very easy to either burn the onions or leave it raw. In either case, the taste is completely ruined. I have also tried other sauces by Patak, but the Vindaloo Paste was the best.

2) Another PP mentioned MDH brand spice mix. I second that. Follow the recipe on the box faithfully and you get the most authentic and delicious tasting dishes. MDH (Mahanshia Di Hatti , literally meaning the "shop of the gentleman" ) is a very old and renowned name and the spice blends are always of a good quality.

3) "Deep" brand sauces and chutneys are also pretty good and fresh.

I am not a fan of frozen Indian meals because they are always some how off. Watch a few youtube videos to learn how to cook Indian food. By far, for a chiefly vegetarian menu, Indian food is quite expensive. The reason is that some times it seems to be very labor intensive.

I have tried many Indian dishes at Costco. The rotis are pretty bad and so are other dishes. However, "Tasty Bites" Madras Daal is quite decent and of course NOGA yogurt is nice. Costco also sells Paneer and Rasmalai at times. Nanak is a good brand for dairy product and sweets.

In the Indian store, the best brand for Ghee and Cheddar Cheese is "AMUL".
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well, I will say if you are trying to replicate good Indian restaurant fare, no premade sauce will ever come close. I should know, kids love Indian food and I try to make it a lot and had many misses over the years. Sauces I use are edible, and kids like it and eat it. One they like is Aldi's Tikka Masala. Does it taste like restaurant one? Not at all. But, it tastes ok, and they eat it. I do sauté onions and garlic first and add turmeric and some curry powder and a chicken cube, and pepper and hot spur red chilies, well, you get the point. It is pretty tasty, we call it mom's version. I do make curry with dry spices. I do wonder why cant they make a good sauce to taste like one in a restaurant?


Why can't you make good sauce and spices? The reason is that most of the spices are seed based. Once you crush the seed into a powder, the taste and smell of the oil within the seeds is what bring flavor to the dish. The fragrance, taste and freshness of the essential oil does not last for very long and so spices even in powder form will not remain fresh for long. . Also, onions, garlic and ginger are main component of most sauces and to preserve it in a bottle you have to add preservatives and chemicals. They change the taste of the sauces. Fresh onions give a sweet taste to sauce and if you are putting it in a bottle, invariably you are going to be adding sugar to make up for the loss of flavor. Fresh tomatos add acidity and tartness to the sauce. You put it in a bottle and to preserve the color and taste you will add some citric acid etc.

Never buy your Indian spices from a mainstream grocery store. Buy MDH brand from Indian stores because the turnover is very quick, the spices are inexpensive because of volume sale and you are guaranteed the freshest, most fragrant spices.

Similarly, most Indian sauces also have paste of fresh ginger and garlic. I use the bottled ginger-garlic paste and the taste is not that great. The days I have time and energy, I will use the fresh ginger and garlic and the dish is beyond amazing.


Finally - you can stick to just frying the onions (aka - browning it without burning) and freezing that. Frying onions is time consuming and messy. If you can just get the frying onion out of the way, making the sauces is not that hard. When you need to make a sauce,

1) Put some frozen fried onions (1 cup) in a saucepan with some cooking oil on medium heat.
2) Add some ginger-garlic paste (2 table spoon) in the onion and mix and cook till the paste turn into a pink color and there is a good aroma from the mixture.
3) Add chopped tomatoes (1 cup) + chopped cilantro (1/4 cup) and continue cooking till the tomatoes become soft and mushy and incorporated with the onions and garlic-ginger paste.
4) Add some salt (1/3 tsp), turmeric powder (1/4 tsp), red chilli powder (1/4 tsp), cumin powder(1/3 tsp) and coriander (cilantro) seed(1/2 tsp) powder, and simmer. This is your basic sauce.
5) Simmer your veggie or meat (1 1/2 - 2 cups) in this sauce till it is cooked through, by covering the pan, and occasionally stirring. Add small amount of water if the curry becomes too thick or start to stick to the pan. Evaporate the water by heating if the curry becomes too watery.

When you want to become more adventurous, try adding small amounts of spices in this mixture to change the flavor. Cardamom, cloves, nutmeg, bay leaves, fennel, poppy seeds, curry leaves, shredded coconut, yogurt...the variations are endless.
Anonymous
I like the tikka masala simmer sauce at Aldi
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well, I will say if you are trying to replicate good Indian restaurant fare, no premade sauce will ever come close. I should know, kids love Indian food and I try to make it a lot and had many misses over the years. Sauces I use are edible, and kids like it and eat it. One they like is Aldi's Tikka Masala. Does it taste like restaurant one? Not at all. But, it tastes ok, and they eat it. I do sauté onions and garlic first and add turmeric and some curry powder and a chicken cube, and pepper and hot spur red chilies, well, you get the point. It is pretty tasty, we call it mom's version. I do make curry with dry spices. I do wonder why cant they make a good sauce to taste like one in a restaurant?


Why can't you make good sauce and spices? The reason is that most of the spices are seed based. Once you crush the seed into a powder, the taste and smell of the oil within the seeds is what bring flavor to the dish. The fragrance, taste and freshness of the essential oil does not last for very long and so spices even in powder form will not remain fresh for long. . Also, onions, garlic and ginger are main component of most sauces and to preserve it in a bottle you have to add preservatives and chemicals. They change the taste of the sauces. Fresh onions give a sweet taste to sauce and if you are putting it in a bottle, invariably you are going to be adding sugar to make up for the loss of flavor. Fresh tomatos add acidity and tartness to the sauce. You put it in a bottle and to preserve the color and taste you will add some citric acid etc.

Never buy your Indian spices from a mainstream grocery store. Buy MDH brand from Indian stores because the turnover is very quick, the spices are inexpensive because of volume sale and you are guaranteed the freshest, most fragrant spices.

Similarly, most Indian sauces also have paste of fresh ginger and garlic. I use the bottled ginger-garlic paste and the taste is not that great. The days I have time and energy, I will use the fresh ginger and garlic and the dish is beyond amazing.


Finally - you can stick to just frying the onions (aka - browning it without burning) and freezing that. Frying onions is time consuming and messy. If you can just get the frying onion out of the way, making the sauces is not that hard. When you need to make a sauce,

1) Put some frozen fried onions (1 cup) in a saucepan with some cooking oil on medium heat.
2) Add some ginger-garlic paste (2 table spoon) in the onion and mix and cook till the paste turn into a pink color and there is a good aroma from the mixture.
3) Add chopped tomatoes (1 cup) + chopped cilantro (1/4 cup) and continue cooking till the tomatoes become soft and mushy and incorporated with the onions and garlic-ginger paste.
4) Add some salt (1/3 tsp), turmeric powder (1/4 tsp), red chilli powder (1/4 tsp), cumin powder(1/3 tsp) and coriander (cilantro) seed(1/2 tsp) powder, and simmer. This is your basic sauce.
5) Simmer your veggie or meat (1 1/2 - 2 cups) in this sauce till it is cooked through, by covering the pan, and occasionally stirring. Add small amount of water if the curry becomes too thick or start to stick to the pan. Evaporate the water by heating if the curry becomes too watery.

When you want to become more adventurous, try adding small amounts of spices in this mixture to change the flavor. Cardamom, cloves, nutmeg, bay leaves, fennel, poppy seeds, curry leaves, shredded coconut, yogurt...the variations are endless.


Thank you for explaining! I never realized any of it. I have no issue with frying onions, it is a base for most of my own Eastern European cuisine, and find it easy, yes browning without burning. It is just that I am never sure how much spices to add. Who would have thought that Eastern European mom would have two Indian food obsessed kids? Indian food got my kids to try so many new foods, even veggies they refused before. It is awesome! Thanks for measures for spices! I did find that curries are best heated on the stove the next day, not in the microwave. Is that just me, or does it ring true for you as well?
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