Online Encyclopedia

CURRY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 649 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CURRY  . (I) (Through the O . Fr. correier, from

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Late
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Lat. conredare, to make ready, prepare; a later form of the French is courroyer, and
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modern French is corroyer), to dress a horse by rubbing down and grooming with a comb; to dress and prepare leather already tanned . The currier pares off roughnesses and inequalities, makes the leather soft and pliable, and gives it the necessary
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surface and colour (see LEATHER) . The word " currier," though early confused in origin with " to curry," is derived from the Late Lat. coriarius, a leather
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dresser, from corium, hide . The phrase " to curry favour," to flatter or cajole, is a 16th century corruption of " to curry favel," i.e. a chestnut horse . This older phrase is an adaptation of an Old French proverbial expression estriller fauvel, and is paralleled in German by the similar den fahlen Hengst streichen . A chestnut or
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fallow horse seems to have been taken as typical of deceit and trickery, at least since the appearance of a French satirical beast
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romance the
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Roman de fauvel (1310), the hero of which is a counterpart of Reynard the Fox (q.v.) . (2) A name applied to a
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great variety of seasoned dishes, especially those of
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Indian origin . The word is derived from the Tamil kari, a
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sauce or relish for rice . In the East, where the
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staple food of the
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people consists of a dish of rice, wheaten cakes, or some other cereal, some kind of relish is required to lend attraction to this insipid food; and that is the
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special office of curry . In India the following are employed as ingredients in curries: anise,
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coriander, cumin,
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mustard and
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poppy seeds; allspice, almonds, assafoetida, butter or ghee, cardamoms, chillies,
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cinnamon,
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cloves,
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cocoa-nut and cocoanut milk and oil, cream and curds,
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fenugreek, the
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tender unripe fruit of Buchanania lancifolia, cheroonjie nuts (the produce of another
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species, B. latifolia), garlic and onions, ginger, lime-juice,
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vinegar, the leaves of Bergera Koenigii (the curry-leaf tree), mace, mangoes, nutmeg, pepper, saffron, salt, tamarinds and turmeric .

The cumin and coriander seeds are generally used roasted . The various materials are cleaned, dried, ground, sifted, thoroughly mixed and bottled . In the East the spices are ground freshly every

day, which gives the Indian curry its superiority in flavour over dishes prepared with the curry-powders of the
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European market .

End of Article: CURRY
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