*Balti Indian Cooking - Introduction*

There really are Balti people who live in Baltistan. Once it was a kingdom
complete with its own royals. Now it is the northernmost part of Pakistan.
It is located on the roof of the world and though few places are as remote
and inhospitable, few people are more friendly and few have such a colourful
history. Their food has evolved over centuries into pan cooked stir-fries
and slow cooked dryish stews. The results are aromatic and very tasty
indeed.

It was an imaginitive restaurateur who, by establishing a Balti restaurant
in, of all places, Birmingham England, a few years ago,
put Balti cooking on the map. It took off in a big way, and just 10 years
later there are no less than 100 Balti houses in Birmingham
alone, with dozens more springing up all over the UK, and sweeping the
British Isles in the way that tandoori did two decades ago.

What is Balti? ============== "Seriously delicious" is how Patrick, Earl of
Lichfield, described Balti cooking when he first encountered in the company
of the Birmingham Post's Carol Ann Rice.  Balti is a type of Kashmiri curry
whose origins go back centuries in the  area which is now northern Pakistan.
Balti refers both to its area of origin and the dish in which the food is
cooked and served to the table. Known also as the Karahi, the Balti pan is a
round bottomed, wok like, heavy cast iron dish with two handles. The food
served in the Balti pan are freshly cooked aromatically spiced curries.
Balti food at its best is very aromatic, but not excessively spiked with
chillies. Traditionally it is eaten without rice or cutlery. Balti bread is
used to scoop up the food, using the right hand only.

The origins of Balti cooking are wide-ranging and owe as much to China (with
a slight resemblance to the spicy cooking of Szechuan) and Tibet as to the
tribal ancestry of the nomad, the tastes of the moghul emperors, the
aromatic spices of Kashmir, and the 'winter foods' of lands high in the
mountains. Balti food is both simple in its concept and cooking, and complex
in its flavours. True Balti food is dryish and slightly oily and spicily
tasty. The modern British Balti house has retained the traditional concepts,
and has widened the range of Balti to encompass many favourite curries which
have never been heard of in Baltistan.
Whether this modification of the authentic and traditiohnal is a good thing
or a bad thing, is frankly, I believe, irrelevant. The
diners at a Birmingham Balti house have as much in common with a Balti or
Pathan tribesman as an alien from outer space. Indeed many of the Balti
house owners and workers have probably been no nearer to Baltistan than
their customers. Their demands are quite different. So too are those of
householders who want to cook at home. In Baltistan they cook what they
cook, day by day, meal by meal according to what provisions they have in
store. Most of us at home do the same for our lunch, tea, supper or dinner.
Unless we are planning an elaborate entertaining session, we simply use what
we've got. In this respect, Balti cooking is perfect.

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