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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() "Omelet" > wrote in message news ![]() > In article >, > "James Silverton" > wrote: > >> Omelet wrote on Tue, 14 Jul 2009 11:56:47 -0500: >> >> >> I like to make curries and then thicken them up towards the >> >> end of cooking. I been told that using cornflour produces a >> >> slightly 'gloupy' texture. Which leaves using plain flour or >> >> self raising flour. Is there any significance difference >> >> between using these two? Thanks. >> >> > I personally prefer arrowroot or corn starch. >> >> Escoffier did not approve of the taste of uncooked flour and nor do I. >> If you can't use a roux, I think cornstarch is best. Certainly, it's all >> I would use for Chinese food. I use non-fat yoghurt in curries despite >> the conditioned reflex of authors that warn it will curdle. It doesn't >> if you mix it with a spoonful or two of flour and in that case the flour >> does get cooked. > > Corn starch is good, but my second choice. :-) > > ymmv of course! Have you tried arrowroot? > -- Hi Om, How do you use arrowroot to thicken? Do you mix it with water first? Have to check the date on my jar of arrowroot. I think the expiration date is probably mid-90's. Jon |
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