Jar of Pataks in the slow cooker 
Been eating curry in restaurants since the 70s these jars are so good it ain't worth messing about making your ownLazy whatnot
WB
As I said in a previous post the Dishoom book gives you all the theories behind good curries and how all the flavours are built up.There is an excellent method of getting the bases sauce right at the back of Dishoom. Cook the onion fast and hot but keep adding water to stop it sticking burning. This is the opposite of the French 40min slow caramalisation. The garlic and ginger get a simialr treatment, then yoghurt or tins of tomatoes. The spices go in later.
mistyricardo.com
I often make a Venison Rendang, in particular good with the fore-quarter cuts.Got some fallow diced up ready for the slow cooker tomorrow ! Recipes please not too spicy as don't want to blow the kids heads off![]()
As regards all these fiddlier bits, don’t bother trying to “fiddle”. Just chop into large chunks bones, sinew and all and let the slow cooking sort out the rest.I made the suggested venison rendang with some muntjac and CWD leg dice. Bloody spectacular.
(Beef Rendang (The BEST Recipe!) - Rasa Malaysia)
I'd like to work out how to more efficiently remove the strands of pounded lemon grass when serving. I'd removed the woodier outer stem, but the taste-testers found the appearance off-putting. There were still four empty plates though. I'd also like it to be a bit redder in colour, but I can see this becoming a regular meal alongside the old faithful venison tagine.
Thanks @Erik Hamburger for the idea.
I'll be trying @Heym SR20 's Biryani next. It sounds like an easier way to make use of the fiddlier, smaller cuts that I have limited options for, like skirt, ribs, neck and shoulder.