The homemade garam masala paste is the key to this tasty curry sauce, served with juicy chunks of seared venison.
Ingredients
- For the garam masala paste
-
- 1
bay leaf - 10
black peppercorns - 5cm/2in piece of
cinnamon stick - 6 green
cardamom pods - 4
cloves - ¼ tsp grated
nutmeg - 1 blade of
mace - 2 garlic
cloves, peeled - 1 tbsp
vegetable oil
- 1
- For the Bangladeshi venison curry
-
- 2 tbsp
vegetable oil - 3
onions, finely sliced - 1 tbsp ginger-
garlic paste (pound equal quantities of garlic and ginger with a little water) salt, to taste - 1 tsp red
chilli powder - 1 tsp ground
cumin - 1 tsp ground
coriander - 1 tsp medium
curry powder - 3 plum
tomatoes, roughly chopped - 2 tbsp finely chopped
fresh coriander - 2 tbsp
vegetable oil - 500g/1lb 2oz
venison fillet - 4 tbsp
coriander cress, to garnish - steamed
basmati rice, to serve
- 2 tbsp
Preparation method
-
For the garam masala paste, blend or pound the ingredients for the garam masala with 50ml/2fl oz water to make a paste.
-
For the Bangladeshi venison curry, heat the oil in a large saucepan and fry the onions gently until lightly coloured. Add the ginger-garlic paste and cook for 2-3 minutes to cook out the raw flavours, then add the garam masala paste and salt to taste. Cook, stirring, for a further 3-4 minutes or until fragrant.
-
Add the ground spices, tomatoes and stir to mix. Pour in about 750ml/1¼ pints of water. Bring to the boil, then cook on a low heat until the sauce has thickened. Add the chopped coriander a few minutes from the end of the cooking time.
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For the venison, preheat the oven to 240C/450F/Gas8. Heat a medium frying pan and add the oil, place the venison fillet in the pan and cook for a couple of minutes on each side then place in oven for eight minutes. Remove from the oven and leave to rest for 10 minutes before serving.
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Serve the sauce on plates, and cut the venison into batons and arrange the venison pieces on top of the sauce and garnish with coriander cress. Serve with steamed basmati rice.