
A good Indian curry
Lomu , my dad was in srinagar and Rawalpindi ,Victoria barracks 1936 and many of the hill stations of the Hindu cush , but he hated Indian food although that is now Pakistan i would have love to be there then . And being from Birmingham we all loved curry but my dad used to mone about the smell , so we had to eat out ,and come home smelling of beer and curry. I'm getting a curry felling but cant go out still got this chest cold .
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I'll check it out if I can find itRandy Cornhole wrote:Go to the 'moon smile and platoo' (opposite la grappa) It has to be that particular one, no other will do. Purloin a seat or two. Ask for a - Guy patpong gallie, also some rice and garlic bread. Ask for it as hot as you like. I promise you wont be dissapointed. If you are i'll pay for it, can't say fairer than that!!!!![]()
Damn another secret out to the great unwashed, you lot owe me big time.

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I'm not sure OK is quite the right word for it. Inedible? Shockingly poor? While it was considerably cheaper than back home to be honest it was poor value because the 'food' was inedible. I guess I'll have to learn to cook some decent Indian curry myself (bit easier to get the ingredients here than back home I suspect). Anyone got any good recipes? He who provides the best might just get a couple of changs out of me!STEVE G wrote:The Taj-Mahal in Hua Hin is OK
Supertonic, if you got an inedible meal there then it's got even worse. I was there a while back and it wasn't good but it was edible, just a bit bland.SuperTonic wrote:I'm not sure OK is quite the right word for it. Inedible? Shockingly poor? While it was considerably cheaper than back home to be honest it was poor value because the 'food' was inedible. I guess I'll have to learn to cook some decent Indian curry myself (bit easier to get the ingredients here than back home I suspect). Anyone got any good recipes? He who provides the best might just get a couple of changs out of me!STEVE G wrote:The Taj-Mahal in Hua Hin is OK
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Its being refurbished at the moment, good food when normal service resumes though.SuperTonic wrote:I'll check it out if I can find itRandy Cornhole wrote:Go to the 'moon smile and platoo' (opposite la grappa) It has to be that particular one, no other will do. Purloin a seat or two. Ask for a - Guy patpong gallie, also some rice and garlic bread. Ask for it as hot as you like. I promise you wont be dissapointed. If you are i'll pay for it, can't say fairer than that!!!!![]()
Damn another secret out to the great unwashed, you lot owe me big time.
Its next to onn onn corner bar, second one down from the temple entrance on the same row as Bam Bams.
Just a warning to all curry-gourmets out there.
This article come from flightglobal.com
British Airways has banned cabin crews from using microwaves for non-airline food after a curry exploded at 35,000ft.
A stewardess caused £20,000 of damage on a Boeing 747 flight from Heathrow to Miami, after she heated up a ready meal she had bought from a supermarket.
The curry blew up in the high-powered microwave, which was in the club class kitchen.
Staff had to use a fire extinguisher to control the blazing oven, although British Airways insists there was no threat to passengers' safety. However, the 747 needed days of repairs.
The airline sent a warning email to its staff, explaining that onboard food needs special packaging because its club class microwaves are twice as powerful as domestic ones.
A BA employee said, "Many cabin crew like to bring their own meals to eat.
"At first we thought the microwaves were a godsend. But this unfortunate incident has left us with egg on our faces."
BA stressed, "At no time was there any danger to passengers or the aircraft."
This article come from flightglobal.com
British Airways has banned cabin crews from using microwaves for non-airline food after a curry exploded at 35,000ft.
A stewardess caused £20,000 of damage on a Boeing 747 flight from Heathrow to Miami, after she heated up a ready meal she had bought from a supermarket.
The curry blew up in the high-powered microwave, which was in the club class kitchen.
Staff had to use a fire extinguisher to control the blazing oven, although British Airways insists there was no threat to passengers' safety. However, the 747 needed days of repairs.
The airline sent a warning email to its staff, explaining that onboard food needs special packaging because its club class microwaves are twice as powerful as domestic ones.
A BA employee said, "Many cabin crew like to bring their own meals to eat.
"At first we thought the microwaves were a godsend. But this unfortunate incident has left us with egg on our faces."
BA stressed, "At no time was there any danger to passengers or the aircraft."
I intend to live forever - so far so good.
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Found itBaaBaa. wrote:Its being refurbished at the moment, good food when normal service resumes though.SuperTonic wrote:I'll check it out if I can find itRandy Cornhole wrote:Go to the 'moon smile and platoo' (opposite la grappa) It has to be that particular one, no other will do. Purloin a seat or two. Ask for a - Guy patpong gallie, also some rice and garlic bread. Ask for it as hot as you like. I promise you wont be dissapointed. If you are i'll pay for it, can't say fairer than that!!!!![]()
Damn another secret out to the great unwashed, you lot owe me big time.
Its next to onn onn corner bar, second one down from the temple entrance on the same row as Bam Bams.

