Match of the week

Prawn curry and saffron lassi
I’m always on the lookout for interesting alcohol-free drinks to pair with food so was pleased to see that Asma Khan had listed some really interesting options at her Darjeeling Express residency at The Sun and 13 Cantons pub in Soho the other day.
We kicked off with her homemade lemonade which was great with some fresh crunchy ‘puchkas’ filled with tamarind water but I then spotted a saffron lassi which I thought would be a cooling counterpoint to our main course dishes.
I’m not normally that keen on lassis, finding many too sweet but this had just a hint of saffron which took it more in a savoury direction. (Apparently she only uses 3 strands of saffron which she infuses in a tablespoon of warm milk and leaves overnight in the fridge - or for a minimum of 4 hours. See full method below.)
It was a perfect match with the spicy prawn curry we'd ordered - maybe partly because we didn't have a raita and it did the same job of cooling the palate between bites. But it’s a great drink in its own right.
Darjeeling Express is open until March 2016 for lunch, early supper and snacks throughout the day and the menu changes every week. For full details of the times and the venue check out Asma’s website.
How to make saffron lassi
Asma writes: Add the saffron infused milk to 175ml yogurt and sugar*, add a bit of water and whip it together till the sugar dissolves. The quantity of water depends on the yogurt you use - bio/low fat yogurt will not require a lot of water. I use Greek/Turkish yogurt which is thicker and needs a bit more.
I only buy Persian saffron. I look for the kind with long strands - they are always better quality then the shorter strands. Sadly the quality of saffron can be inconsistent - the only way to buy saffron is by looking at the strands. The brand name is not important.
The lassi should not be too sweet or you will overwhelm the floral delicate taste of the saffron

Sparkling wine and spicy snacks
The idea of drinking sparkling wine with Indian street food might seem crazy but it’s a really good pairing as I was reminded last night when I dined at Masala Zone just off Carnaby Street with Warren Edwardes, the CEO of a company called Wine for Spice.
Edwardes sells three wines which you’d probably consider unremarkable if you tasted them on their own but which are cleverly designed to deal with the heat of spicy food. He deliberately set out to replicate the effect of a lager, still most people’s drink of choice with a curry. by creating a wine that had a refreshing spritz - less fizzy than a sparkling wine but fizzier than a still one. The wines are also modest in alcohol which means that you can swig rather than sip them.
The pairing I thought worked best was his Viceroy White, a blend of the grapes that are used to make cava (Macabbeo, Parellada and Xarel-lo) and just 11.5% We tried it with two different spicy snacks - chicken tikka served with a fresh coriander chutney and some sev puri, crisp little biscuits topped with spicy mash and fresh chutneys and scattered with what looked like deep-fried vermicelli. As usual with sparkling wines it paired really well with the crisp snack but also handled the stronger flavours of the marinated chicken and chutney well, both dishes enhancing the natural creaminess of the wine.
I also tried his Raja Rosé, a strong dry rosé, again made in Spain from Tempranillo and Garnacha with a lamb thali based on rogan josh and a hottish Goan prawn curry with his Rani Gold, a blend of the Catalan grape varieties above with 50% Muscat, quite similar to Torres Viña Esmeralda. Again, given the strength of the wines (12.5% and 11.5% respectively) they held up surprisingly well because of the spritz. (One of the reasons Edwardes - a banker in a former life - makes them semi-sparkling is because the wine attracts a lower tax rate than sparkling wines like Champagne but they also do the job of refreshing the palate without making you feel excessively bloated or gassy.)
Would I serve the wines at home? I’m not sure that I would (I’d probably go for full-strength fizz) but I’d be extremely grateful to find them in an Indian restaurant. You can apparently buy them from Ocado in the UK or contact Warren through his website wineforspice.com
Incidentally, Masala Zone is a great place to go for a quick meal if you’re in the West End. It serves genuinely authentic Indian street food at a very fair price. There are also branches in Islington and Earl's Court.
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