Most people think Vindaloo is an Indian dish, but it is actually a European stew made by Portuguese colonists using local ingredients.
There are countless recipes, but the Real Stuff must use pork as the meat, and vinegar as the preservative/acid agent.
Though famous for being fire-hot in spice terms, that reputation evolved largely as a 20th century restaurant thing.
Which isn't to say that the authentic style is remotely close to bland or flat. Quite the opposite. It has a magical "slow burn" sort of complex, layered heat and depth of flavor that's unforgettable. The heat just isn't the cheap-and-easy "hot wing challenge" kind that anyone can add to anything from a bottle.
If you decide to give it a try, please report back.
There are countless recipes, but the Real Stuff must use pork as the meat, and vinegar as the preservative/acid agent.
Though famous for being fire-hot in spice terms, that reputation evolved largely as a 20th century restaurant thing.
Which isn't to say that the authentic style is remotely close to bland or flat. Quite the opposite. It has a magical "slow burn" sort of complex, layered heat and depth of flavor that's unforgettable. The heat just isn't the cheap-and-easy "hot wing challenge" kind that anyone can add to anything from a bottle.
If you decide to give it a try, please report back.