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Chicken Tikka

  1. BTW...

    What is the difference between tikka masala and butter sauce?

    The remarkably similar dishes differ in just one way — butter chicken (murgh makani) is a creamy blend of tomato sauce and spices while tikka masala has a creamy tomato gravy and onion sauce. “They almost look the same but there is a subtle difference in taste and flavor,


    Putting chicken tikka in butter sauce is no different than putting it in masala sauce.

  2. DrugSmuggler African Astronaut
  3. You shouldn't put chicken tikka in either sauce, chicken tikka masala is not chicken tikka. There's no relationship between the two. Chicken Tikka is a barbeque dish.

    Chicken Tikka masala is a faggy unrelated gravy dish that initially didn't even start off with barbeque chicken in the masala, because this just ruins 90% of why you BBQ meat.

    If you want to make a chicken Tikka masala or butter chicken that's fine, makes zero sense to make a chicken Tikka and then throw it into either shitty sauce. Half the work of preparing a chicken tikka is to make it taste and feel just so as a BBQ dish.

    Might as well dunk the whole thing in mop water at that point.

    Butter Chicken and Tikka Masala sauces etc aren't that different, it is a tomato base with a couple other things, you shouldn't waste areal chicken Tikka on either. Just roast chicken chunks in a pan or some shit, same result because you are going to spill some sauce on it and simmer it anyway.
  4. Originally posted by Who are you, John Joke (inventor of jokes)? You shouldn't put chicken tikka in either sauce, chicken tikka masala is not chicken tikka. There's no relationship between the two.

    Um yes it's the same meat, it's chicken tikka in masala sauce...hence the name chicken tikka masala

    It is traditionally small pieces of boneless chicken baked using skewers on a brazier called angeethi or over charcoal after marinating in Indian spices and dahi (yogurt)—essentially a boneless version of tandoori chicken.[2] The word tikka (Tike in Turkish, and Tikə in Azerbaijani) is a Persian word, meaning "bits" or "pieces".

    So again, the butter sauce and masala source are extremely similar...it follows you can throw chicken tikka in both and it's delicious.

    You're clearly another "by the book" person who lacks experimentation with anything other than gay men.
  5. "Chicken tikka masala is composed of chicken tikka, boneless chunks of chicken marinated in spices and yogurt that are roasted in an oven, served in a creamy curry sauce."

    Picard goes here.
  6. Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Um yes it's the same meat, it's chicken tikka in masala sauce…hence the name chicken tikka masala

    It is traditionally small pieces of boneless chicken baked using skewers on a brazier called angeethi or over charcoal after marinating in Indian spices and dahi (yogurt)—essentially a boneless version of tandoori chicken.[2] The word tikka (Tike in Turkish, and Tikə in Azerbaijani) is a Persian word, meaning "bits" or "pieces".

    So again, the butter sauce and masala source are extremely similar…it follows you can throw chicken tikka in both and it's delicious.

    You're clearly another "by the book" person who lacks experimentation with anything other than gay men.

    I'm just gonna end this discussion by giving the analogy of preparing a really nice barbeque dish and then immediately throwing it in a bowl full of ketchup. That's what you're doing.
  7. Originally posted by Who are you, John Joke (inventor of jokes)? I'm just gonna end this discussion by giving the analogy of preparing a really nice barbeque dish and then immediately throwing it in a bowl full of ketchup. That's what you're doing.



    Dismissed.
  8. Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson

    Dismissed.

    No you are not. Remain standing.
  9. Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Um yes it's the same meat, it's chicken tikka in masala sauce…hence the name chicken tikka masala

    It is traditionally small pieces of boneless chicken baked using skewers on a brazier called angeethi or over charcoal after marinating in Indian spices and dahi (yogurt)—essentially a boneless version of tandoori chicken.[2] The word tikka (Tike in Turkish, and Tikə in Azerbaijani) is a Persian word, meaning "bits" or "pieces".

    So again, the butter sauce and masala source are extremely similar…it follows you can throw chicken tikka in both and it's delicious.

    You're clearly another "by the book" person who lacks experimentation with anything other than gay men.

    Dude didn't know chicken tikka is in chicken tikka masala

  10. Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Dude didn't know chicken tikka is in chicken tikka masala


    Dude doesn't know how to read english^
  11. Originally posted by Who are you, John Joke (inventor of jokes)? Dude doesn't know how to read english^

    *English

  12. Originally posted by Who are you, John Joke (inventor of jokes)? You shouldn't put chicken tikka in either sauce


    Which part am I not understanding??



    You're wrong and too womanly to admit it...you also implied you were done with this conversation and yet here you are "womanly" continuing it...What gives Susan?
  13. Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson *English


    Doesn't even know how to spell english^
  14. Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Which part am I not understanding??



    You're wrong and too womanly to admit it…you also implied you were done with this conversation and yet here you are "womanly" continuing it…What gives Susan?

    No you just fail at reading.

    Since the start my point has remained that it is a waste of chicken tikka, a BBQ dish, to put it into a sauce, specifically chicken Tikka masala sauce or even a close analogue.

    Chicken Tikka and chicken Tikka masala aren't the same thing. Making a Tikka to put it into the sauce is pointless. You can literally just grill chicken with masala in a pan at that point if you are just going to throw it into a simmer sauce.

    The only reason you're having trouble grasping this is because you do not understand why someone BBQs a chicken, why you simmer chicken in a sauce and why never the twain should meet.
  15. Originally posted by Who are you, John Joke (inventor of jokes)? I'm just gonna end this discussion by giving the analogy of preparing a really nice barbeque dish and then immediately throwing it in a bowl full of ketchup. That's what you're doing.

    ↑ dalits are too poor to afford a plateful of ketchup.

  16. Originally posted by Who are you, John Joke (inventor of jokes)? No you just fail at reading.

    The irony

    Chicken Tikka and chicken Tikka masala aren't the same thing.

    No one said they were dumbass...however chicken tikka IS the component IN Chicken Tikka masala...You said (as quoted) chicken tikka shouldn't be put in any sauce...what a recockulous statement.

    Chicken tikka masala and butter chicken (which both use chicken Tikka as the meat component) are some of the most popular "Indian" dishes around.

    ...so where do you get this "Chicken Tikka shouldn't be used in either sauce" from?

    What's your sauce??
  17. BTW, you can definitely taste the difference between regular cooked chicken vs chicken tikka in BOTH dishes...if you can't your taste buds are fried...it's much tastier with the chicken tikka in it.
  18. just like chop suey, cock tika massalla is a fake "indian" food made and tailored to "americans" uncultured, low iq taste buds.

    no such thing or menu exists in real, shit covered india.
  19. Originally posted by vindicktive vinny just like chop suey, cock tika massalla is a fake "indian" food made and tailored to "americans" uncultured, low iq taste buds.

    no such thing or menu exists in real, shit covered india.

    Lol, it was tailored for the British not Americans...The Brits used to own India remember...We tell Gupta what we like and Gupta makes it for Master.
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