Trinidadian Curry Goat
Trinidadian curry goat sits in a quiet rivalry with Jamaican curry goat, but the two are different dishes. Jamaican curry goat is built on Madras-style curry powder, scotch bonnet and allspice with little coconut and a wetter finish. Trinidadian curry goat is built on a fresh blend of green seasoning (a herb-and-aromatic puree of culantro, thyme, garlic, chives and onion), Caribbean curry powder (which leans heavily on amchar masala and roasted geera), and the bunjay technique of frying the curry paste in oil until it splits before the meat goes in. The result is a darker, herbier, drier curry that hugs the bone rather than pooling around it. Kid goat is the preferred meat; older mutton-goat works but takes longer. UK home cooks can usually find kid goat at Caribbean butchers, Halal butchers and many Asian supermarkets in the chilled or frozen section. Bone-in pieces are essential for flavour and gelatin. Lamb shoulder on the bone makes an honest substitute. Difficulty is low to moderate; the cook is mostly long and passive once the curry is bunjayed. Serve with paratha-style "buss-up-shut" roti, dhalpuri roti, white rice, or coconut rice.