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Random Recipes: Burmese Curry

There are few things more random than the meanderings of a two-and-a-bit-year-old, so I put mine to good use and got her to select the cookbook for this month's Random Recipe challenge.


I can't remember how I came to be in possession of Great Ways With Steak & Chops. It was probably a joke gift - I have 'Cooking For Couples' and '100 Dishes For Two' that we got as engagement presents. GWWSC was published in 1972 by the Australian Women's Weekly and written by its well-respected food editor, Ellen Sinclair. Her name should have prompted me to open this book earlier, but food snobbery being what it is, I thought the whole book would be full of appalling examples of 70s cuisine. There are many things in this book I will never, ever, make - such as Veal Oscar (veal steaks topped with canned asparagus, lobster meat and bearnaise sauce) or Pineapple Bacon Cutlets (lamb, topped with tinned pineapple rings, wrapped in bacon, breadcrumbed and baked), but GWWSC actually has some interesting, even enticing, recipes. This is one of them.

Burmese Curry
Ellen Sinclair, who wrote loads of other titles for the Australian Women's Weekly, certainly knew her stuff. These recipes are very well-written and easy to follow (even if the photos are hilariously awful). The original recipe was very dry, so I splashed in about a cup of water as detailed below and upped the chilli quotient as detailed below. This can also be cooked in the oven - after adding the water clamp the lid on and let it bake for about 1 1/2 hours at 150C.

900g chuck steak, cut into 2cm chunks
2Tbsp oil
4 onions, finely chopped
5cm ginger, grated
2 cloves garlic, crushed
2tsp turmeric
1/2tsp chilli flakes
1 beef stock cube
1 1/2 - 2 cups water
2tsp soy sauce

Heat the oil in a large, heavy pan with a lid. Add the meat and brown well, add the onions, ginger and garlic. Cook until golden brown.
Add turmeric, chilli, water and stock cube and bring to the boil, stirring.
Cover, reduce heat and simmer gently for one hour or until the meat is tender. Add soy sauce and salt to taste. Serve with rice. Serves 4-6.
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