• trickylens
    2 years ago

    A curry is a spiced dish with a sauce.

    I made a carbonara variant, with a sauce, with chilli and garlic.

    Is that a curry? If not, what is a curry - and equally important, what isn't?

    Is "curry" just a lazy stupid ill defined concept for idiotic English people? Apart from when it's curry leaves, obviously.

  • Russlens
    2 years ago

    This is "is a hot dog a sandwich?" territory.

    I think a curry would reasonably be expected to have a greater amount of the kind of spices and herbs commonly associated with the dish than just chilli and garlic. After all, an arrabiatta isn't a curry. Nor is a five alarm wing sauce. I think you would probably expect to see some variation of nigella, mustard seeds, curry leaves, fenugreek, cumin, coriander, turmeric, ginger and cardamom, and probably less of the egg and aged cheese that are essential to a carbonara and far less commonly found in curry.

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    Associated with the dish, you say. What dish? This is exactly the problem. What is a curry, and what isn't?

    It's just an ill thought out broad brush stroke ill defined stupid annoyance.

  • JimShadypanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    When do shoes turn into boots? I'd say they have to cover your ankle, but I'm not sure it's a perfect science.

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    So you're saying that football boots are not boots?

    We are going to need a things that are called a thing, but are not the thing, thread.

  • Russlens
    2 years ago

    I already told you. There isn't a problem, other than one you choose to try and invent.

    A carbonara with chilli isn't a curry. It isn't really a carbonara either, FWIW.

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    Forget carbonara. What is a curry. What isn't.

  • Nottingham_Floristpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Any vaguely Anglo-Indian* influenced spicy, moist savoury dish.

    (*South Asian plus East Asian e.g. Thai)

  • Russlens
    2 years ago

    Also Caribbean, albeit with a strong Asian influence. Also Far Eastern as Japan and China both have their own variants.

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    Right. So what is being said is that it's a moist savoury dish, with spices, from all sorts of regions.

    It's not really a thing, is it?

  • Nottingham_Floristpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    I don't think I'd call a spicy Caribbean dish a curry but your view may vary.

    Certainly, it's a colonial word that doesn't bother to distinguish between various parts of "foreign".

  • Ingopanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Why is a hotdog not a sandwich? Apart from a higher ear, eye and arse hole content it's essentially a hot pork cob.

  • Joannapanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    I had a quick Google (because I know you don't like using it) and gunk with some form of spice seems to be the main answer, although most websites agree it's generally Asian gunk.

    "curry, (from Tamil kari: “sauce”), in Western usage, a dish composed with a sauce or gravy seasoned with a mixture of ground spices that is thought to have originated in India and has since spread to many regions of the world"

    "A curry is a dish with a sauce seasoned with spices, mainly associated with South Asian cuisine · There are many varieties of curry"

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    In lazy racist misanthropic Britain, 'an Indian' is synonymous with 'a curry'. Do Indians all eat curry (not in my experience)? Why would we do that?

    Is this really just a Victoria falls moment? Us cultural imperialists discovering something, and calling it the wrong name?

    We appear to have discovered spiced food. Yay for us. Put a flag in it for the emperor of the world.

  • Nottingham_Floristpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    If I use two slices of bread to make a sandwich and cut it diagonally in half, how many sandwiches do I have?

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    This is an excellent question. I might not get any work done today.

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