What is meant by "cook until the oil separates" in Indian curry recipes?
A lot of Indian curry recipes have a step where you're told to cook an onion-tomato-spices mixture "until the oil separates". Despite having tried cooking such recipes a number of times already, I still haven't really figured out what is meant by this. I have several questions:
- How can I tell that the oil is separating? I'm never quite sure whether I'm seeing oil or water coming out of the mixture while it's cooking.
- How long on average do you need to cook the mixture until the oil separates?
- What causes the oil to separate? Is it simply that all the water has been cooked out of the mixture?
- Why do you need to let the oil separate?
Best Answer
Oil is separated in curries normally after you have cooked spices or sauces for ~10-15 mins. You can tell by seeing "bubbles" appearing and the oil by making a thin layer on top of your sauces/curry.
It varies, but normally after 10-15 mins the oil separates from your curry.
Normally after cooking for 10-15 mins most of the water dries up which causes the curry (mostly made of thick sauces) to separate from the oil.
It's always good to let the oil separate from your curry because of two things:
- Extra water dries up
- All spices and curry get cooked properly
The food tastes much better if spices and the curries are properly cooked.
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What does it mean to cook until oil separates?
The process of cooking aromatics and spices in hot fat so that they lose all the moisture, form a paste and release oil is called \u201ccook until oil separates\u201d. This released oil then forms a layer on top of curry base indicating that the curry base is ready.How long does it take for oil to separate?
Oil is separated in curries normally after you have cooked spices or sauces for ~10-15 mins. You can tell by seeing "bubbles" appearing and the oil by making a thin layer on top of your sauces/curry.How do you make oil float in curry?
How to make oil separate from the gravy?How do you separate oil from curry?
The hot curry has lots of oil floating on top, which is removed with a simple trick - with the help of a huge ice cube. The spherical ice was immersed in the gravy, and within seconds, the excess oil got stuck beneath it. The layer of fat then was removed and separated from the gravy.Mutton Karahi | Easy Karahi Recipe | Pakistani Food | Hina Barkat
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Answer 2
Oil and water have different boiling points. Oil has a higher boiling point as compared to water.Spices and aromatic release their flavors only in oil because the compounds in them that are responsible for aroma/flavor are oil soluble.However, they can burn easily in very hot oil. Most Indian recipes require that they are cooked in a mixture of water and oil (typically onion + tomato or in some regions, coconut or sesame seeds). Water evaporates, raising the temp of the mix slowly and spices, vegetables, meat etc. release their flavors slowly. When the oil separates/is visible, the temp is the highest. Depending on how you want spices to release flavor, you add them before or after oil separates. These practices vary from recipe to recipe and region to region in India as the oils, spices and other ingredients are varied in nature. Hope that was useful.
Answer 3
Nadia is right. Use your nose and ears too. After a while the sauce will lose its watery appearance and the rawer flavours in the air emanating from the pan will begin to be repalced with more moorish aromas and a greater sizzling. By these stages you'll see angry looking bubbles of oil around the suace and need to keep stirring. I tend to stir a little longer to prevent sticking while getting my (meat/stock/lentils - whichever- etc) ready to pour in.
I find the stage is easy to identify by colour in the case of Tomatoey sauces. these tend to develop a browner appearance by the oil-separating stage.
Oniony-garlicky-gingery mush sauces lose their raw aroma and then their wateriness and start to develop the oil bubbles after a while - about 10-15 as Nadia says. Some great meat curries add the meat and dry spices to the still cooking onion and it gets a refry from the maet juices until drying again. When its really sizzling and sticking to the pan in goes the water, stir until boiling, and on goes the lid for slow cooking
Answer 4
In my experience most recipes call for too much water and therefore will take a very long time to evaporate. Just add enough water to make a creamy sauce (or barely cover the meat)and if the meat is not cooked add more water a little at a time, even if it is in a casserole pan with the lid on top, check it every 15 minutes. In a casserole with a lid on top it retains a lot of water but cooks the meat which I find with a kilo of meat it takes approx 2 hours at 140 degrees centigrade. You can finish it on the stove top on an open flame. Regards ... Mike
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