1 episode

Promoting Mauritian Cuisine, exchanging news about produce and cooking tips to make your favourite Mauritian dishes.

Best of Mauritian Cuisine Clancy Philippe

    • Arts

Promoting Mauritian Cuisine, exchanging news about produce and cooking tips to make your favourite Mauritian dishes.

    The history of the vindaye or the vindaloo.

    The history of the vindaye or the vindaloo.

    The vindaloo is a traditional recipe of the Catholic community of Goa, an Indian state on the country’s southwestern coast. Vindaloo is an adaptation of the Portugese dish “carne de vinho e alhos” (Ref: Lizzie Collingham in A tale of Cooks and Conquerors) shortened to vindaloo. Carne meaning beef, vinho meaning crisp white wine (vinegar) and alhos meaning garlic.

    You can use the following recipe to prepare a “potent” vindaloo paste:

    1½ tsp cumin seeds
    15-20 dried kashmiri chillies whole
    1 tsp black mustard seeds
    1 tsp fenugreek seeds
    6 cloves
    1 tsp cardamon seeds
    2 in (5 cm) piece of cassia
    ½ star anise
    6 tbsp cider vinegar
    1 tsp fine salt
    2 tsp date palm sugar

    Toast the spices (without the vinegar, salt and palm sugar) in a frying pan over a medium heat until fragrant, then grind. Transfer to a bowl, add the vinegar, salt and palm sugar. Mix to a stiff paste.
    Use for seasoning your vindaloo dish. Enjoy.

    Visit our website at www.tasteofmauritius.com.au

    • 3 min

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