Anglo Indian Mutton Vindaloo

Binapani Mitra

(When I first made this recipe somewhere abroad fellow Indians thought I was pulling a fast one, making do with available spices as a result the dish was a far cry from the Goan Vindaloo that most were used to. I suppose at the time of Binapani Mitra it was a brave to cook an Anglo Indian dish and publish it too. Remember this is the 1930s when publishing European dishes were not a no-no but the Anglo-Indian dishes were a hot favourite for the Bengali palate. But to proudly describe it so at the time must have been a brave act - Editor)

Ingredients

Goat meat – 1 kg

Cumin seeds – 200gm

Pepper seeds – 50gm

Dry red chillies – six

Mustard seeds – 200 gm

Ginger – 1” stick

Tamarind – 1 medium sized ball soaked in water

Onion – 2 big roughly chopped

Garlic – 10 chopped

Mustard oil – 4 medium serving spoons

Wash and clean and then soak the mutton in half the ball of soaked tamarind ball water. Keep aside for half an hour.

Grind the mustard seeds with some tamarind water. Keep aside. Grind the rest of the spices with the remaining tamarind water. Mix the ground mustard seeds with the rest of the ground spices.

Take the mutton and mix the marinade well into the meat. Heat the oil and dip the marinated meat into the hot oil. Stir the meat in the oil so the grease seals the juice of the meat. You can chop 4 to 6 potatoes in French fry shapes and fry the potatoes in the oil with the meat. When the meat starts turning brown, put the onion and garlic in. Fry. When the onion loses color put in the ground spices and salt. Toss everything well and put in a cup of hot water for the gravy, the gravy should be enough to coat the meat and potatoes, avoid too much water.

You can use a pressure cooker, but at the time of Binapani there was no such quick-cook apparatus. I suppose the slow cooking made the dish that much more tasty.

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