Traditionally, tandoori dishes are cooked in a tandoor, an oval shaped clay oven with a small fire in the bottom. The heat rises gradually but ultimately reaches a much higher temperature than a barbeque. A tandoor is normally used to cook naan bread, meats and kebabs (meat or paneer). The bread is stuck to the sides, the kebabs stood vertically and whole chickens rested on a grid over the fire. For domestic cooking, a tandoor is not really convenient but the meat dishes can be reproduced on a barbeque or in the oven. The bright red appearance of tandoori meats which you may see in Indian restaurants is produced by a food dye which really isn’t necessary to enhance the look of your…
Cooking Tips
-
Common Cooking Methods Explained
If you are preparing any kind of meals from a recipe, it’s important that you understand the various methods....
-
Cooking Grains
All grains, with the exception of rice, and the various grain meals, require prolonged cooking with gentle and continuous....
-
Tips for Selecting the Right Beef Cuts
When we stand at the butchers counter, most of us may wonder what is the difference between a top....
Popular articles
Dessert Recipes
-
Brownie Cupcakes
The allure of the cupcake has gone beyond children’s party fare. All the world, it seems, has a passion....
-
Jewish Coffee Cake
Now here is a coffee cake that will make you want no other coffee cake, and once you prepare....
-
Sensational Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies
This is an absolutely spectacular recipe for chocolate oatmeal cookies. Though oatmeal cookies are not considered a cool, modern....