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Vindaloo

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Course
  
Main course(gravy)

Type of dish
  
Region
  

Region or state
  
Goa

Place of origin
  
India

Serving temperature
  
Hot

Vindaloo Vindaloo Recipe British Indian Restaurant Recipe The Curry Guy

Main ingredients
  
Similar
  
Curry, Korma, Rogan josh, Jalfrezi, Madras curry sauce

Chicken vindaloo restaurant style by misty ricardo s curry kitchen


Vindaloo (also known as vindalho) is an Indian curry dish popular in the region of Goa, the surrounding Konkan, and many other parts of India. The cuisine also includes a variation of the dish. However, it is known globally in its Anglo-Indian form as a staple of curry house and Indian restaurant menus, often regarded as a fiery, spicy dish, even though it is not necessarily the spiciest dish available.

Contents

Vindaloo wwwthebittenwordcoma6a00e55015ee528833017c382

Real vindaloo portuguese goan indian curry professional recipe for beef or pork


History

Vindaloo Vindaloo Cook Diary

A "vindaloo", a standard element of Indian cuisine derived from the Portuguese carne de vinha d'alhos (literally "meat in garlic wine marinade"), is a dish of meat (usually pork) marinated in wine and garlic. The basic structure of the Portuguese dish was the Portuguese sailor's "preserved" raw ingredients, packed in wooden barrels of alternate layers of Pork and garlic, and soaked in wine. This was "Indianized" by the local Goan cooks with the substitution of palm vinegar for the red wine, and the addition of dried red chili peppers with additional spices. It evolved into the localized and easy-to-pronounce dish "vindaloo". Nowadays, the Anglo-Indian version of vindaloo calls for the meat to be marinated in vinegar, sugar, fresh ginger and spices overnight, then cooked with the addition of more spices.

Indian preparation and variations

Vindaloo Vindaloo Cook Diary

Restaurants in Goa offering traditional Goan cuisine serve vindaloo with pork, which is the original recipe. The dish was popularized by Goan cooks (whom the British favoured because they had no issues in kitchens and bars when handling beef, pork or liquor) in the British establishments and the ocean-going liners. This dish is still available on the P&O liners in its original "pork vindaloo" form. However, restaurants outside Goa serve vindaloo with chicken or lamb, which is sometimes mixed with cubed potatoes. Even though the word aloo (आलू) means potato in Hindi, traditional vindaloo does not include potatoes.

Outside India

Vindaloo The Foods of England Vindaloo

Vindaloo has gained popularity outside of India, where it is almost universally featured on menus at Indian restaurants. Vindaloo served in restaurants of the United Kingdom differs from the original vindaloo dish; it is simply a spicier version of the standard "medium (spiciness)" restaurant curry with the addition of vinegar, potatoes and chili peppers. Despite its origins, the British-style vindaloo is usually not served with pork; meat choices are mostly chicken, beef, lamb, mutton, or prawn.

Vindaloo is one of the spiciest dishes available on menus where it is served, although some restaurants serve a tindaloo, which is a completely different dish that originated in Bangladesh. The Bengali "tindaloo" is one step spicier than vindaloo, with the addition of more chillies, but one of the hottest spicy curry dishes is the phall. These two dishes are sometimes omitted from the menu because they are regarded as too spicy for the majority of diners, but they can be prepared by special request.

References

Vindaloo Wikipedia


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