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You'll need to buy this book to cook anything remotely unauthentic:
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02-02-2024 09:12 AM
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I am very much interested in that book as well, especially as you were talking about pork. A good friend of mine who is from Sri Lanka and was raised as a Hindu told me that in Southern India the food is the more vegan the higher the caste. Beef is more a thing of Northern India according to him where more muslims are living who do not consider cattle as holy. But pork would be haram for a muslim. I know that pork is eaten in Vietnam and Korea, so Buddhists maybe? I will see, the book is in the lending library of Internet Archive.
Originally Posted by BWV
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Better get this one
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
ColoBk : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
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The traditional meat for vindaloo is pork, as the dish has Portuguese origin:
Originally Posted by Bop Head
Vindaloo" is derived from the Portuguese word "Vinha De Alhos," which refers to the dish's two key ingredients, "Vinho" and "Alhos". Initially, it was a watery stew in Portugal cooked with pork or beef and vinegar and garlic. However, after the Portuguese moved to India, it was entirely transformed with the inclusion of spices and chillies, and it has since become one of the world's spiciest and most popular curry meals.
https://www.currytraders.com.au/blogs/quick-easy-curry-recipes/the-history-of-the-vindaloo-curry
not sure about the history prior to that, but seems that tropical Southern India would be as conducive to pork-raising as SE Asia
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And I always thought that vindaloo was Sanskrit or Hindi or Tamil LOL.
Originally Posted by BWV
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Pork is eaten everywhere in the world except by Muslims and Jews. One of the things that makes swine a more economical source of meat is that they will eat anything. Absolutely anything. There are descriptions of pigs in France eating the bodies of dead soldiers during WWI. Strict Buddhists eat no meat, AFAIK, but they aren't a significant percentage of the world population.
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Yes very efficient, apparently pig toilets are still relatively common in S India
Originally Posted by sgosnell
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Originally Posted by sgosnell
Hindus do not eat meat, nor do Seventh Day Adventists and secular vegetarians. Buddhists will not kill; but in some traditions it is acceptable, even obligatory, to eat meat if it is a gift. The Buddha himself died by eating contaminated pork.
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some do, its hardly a monolithic religion
Originally Posted by Litterick
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Wow. The humble, brief fish sauce comment completely fire bombed the OP thread. Respect.
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This is not Mr Beaumont’s first rodeo. His powers are considerable.
Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett
Last edited by pamosmusic; 02-03-2024 at 01:34 AM.
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I was reading this thread and was compelled to immediately make myself some delicious mutter paneer, which was easy thanks to my frozen cubes of onion masala.
I have become the masala bore. The mastering engineer on my last two albums is also a member of team pressure cooker masala. It’s a bit like Dorico. We will not shut up about it.
Instant curry on demand, boys. Think about it.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Haven't you got some Paganini or something to drone on about?
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Through my use of pre prepared onion masala I can afford myself many more hours of boring on about dead Europeans on JGO.
Originally Posted by A. Kingstone
Truly, Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
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To be honest it sounds truly delicious.
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I just got inspired to look up pressure cooker time for lentils.
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IME lentils don't need a pressure cooker. They cook quickly, and if you let the pressure cooker go just a little too long, you get mush. If that's what you're going for in the end, it works though.
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Deleted. Too off topic.
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How could that possibly be true? This thread already went from beginning jazz guitar to lentils.
Originally Posted by jumpnblues
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If anyone ever finds a thread on an internet forum that doesn't go off topic, please alert me. That's something I've never seen.
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Just make sure you wash them properly, or there'll be plenty of trumpet licks.
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Nothing NEEDS a pressure cooker. Pressure cookers are just a time saver for things like braised meats and soups. For lentils, they save maybe half an hour of cook time, which is not a big deal compared to, say, the hours you save with brisket, but it's something.
Originally Posted by sgosnell



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