tips for improving your takeaway

Missing the quality of food you get at restaurants? Here are some top tips to improve your takeaway with ingredients in your cupboard as advised by some of the city’s top chefs…

A recent study has revealed the top activity the British population want to do once this is all over is go out for dinner. While the lockdown is looking to still go on for a while, there are a few takeaways open so you can still enjoy a night off from cooking! This is all good and well, but sometimes takeaways don’t quite hit the culinary mark, which is why we’ve collated some top tips to improve your takeaway from some of the UK’s top chefs using ingredients from your cupboard…

James Cochran – 12:51

Pizza: I always add soy sauce to a takeaway pizza, it brings out the sweetness in the tomato whilst intensifying the cheesy umami goodness.
Curry: Always order more naan than you need. With the leftovers, add cheese, lime pickle, plain yoghurt, and chilli sauce and grill for a delicious new dish, perfect for a weekend brunch or hangover snack!
Kebab: Order a proper chicken shish kebab and when you’re waiting for it to arrive, make up a packet béarnaise sauce. Pour it all over the kebab when it’s all nice and hot. Game changer

12:15

Top tips to improve your takeaway

Tom Booton – The Grill, The Dorchester

Burger: If I get a burger delivered, I have to make my dirty mayonnaise for the chips, it’s one of my top tips to improve your takeaway! It’s made up of two parts mayonnaise, one part tomato ketchup, one tablespoon chopped capers & gherkins and a dash of tabasco to taste. I always have a pot of it in the fridge! It’s banging with a steak.

Ben Tish – The Stafford Collection

Curry: If I’m ordering an Indian, I’ll always get roti on the side. To refresh them, I get a frying pan very hot and then flash fry the roti on both sides for a minute or so. It gets them nice and fresh and crispy. Also chopped fresh coriander and a squeeze of lemon juice adds a zing to any curry if it needs livening up a bit.

The Grill, The Dorchester

Top tips to improve your takeaway

Martin Sweeney – The Petersham

Fish and chips: So for my top tips to improve your takeaway, unless you’re eating your fish and chips right away, ask for just salt and add your favourite vinegar when you get home, this will keep the chips from getting sweaty and soggy in the bag. Mix brown sauce and vinegar and get dipping, it sounds odd but it’s a staple in Edinburgh and it works surprisingly well!
Curry: The most consistently disappointing thing about curries is the condiments. Knock up a quick raita at home from natural yoghurt, cucumber and mint and keep a jar of good quality mango chutney handy. Give soggy naans a flash in the oven to re-crisp.
Fried chicken: Fried chicken goes well with pickled gherkins – the salt and vinegar compliments the hot, crispy chicken wonderfully. Slice up some gherkins at home for a sour refresher between bites of chicken. I’d also mix a bit of pungent blue cheese with jarred mayonnaise for a great cheesy dip.

The Petersham

tips for improving your takeaway

Pip Lacey – Hicce

Pizza: Even the worst takeaway pizza can be improved with a hit of chilli. I keep lots of Thai green chillies in the freezer so I can add them to takeaway pizzas when needed. Also, if you ever see chilli oil in a sachet, grab a few extras for future pizzas and go to town with it.
Chicken Wings: Whatever cuisine you decide to order, if they do chicken wings – add them! Chicken wings are always a good idea.
Sushi: Always ask for extra wasabi with any Japanese takeaway. If the flavours are lacking then the wasabi will add a welcome hit of heat and always make sure you have soy sauce In the house.
Curry: Keep a jar of mango chutney in the house. They never send enough with the poppadoms and always get two poppadoms each so you’re not fighting over the crumbs.

Hicce

Top tips to improve your takeaway

Sara Lewis – Vintry & Mercer

Curry: For the two of us, our usual failsafe order is one crunchy starter, one rice, a veggie side dish, a main and a naan bread. Follow that equation and you can’t go wrong! I always love to make a dipping yoghurt when we’re waiting for the delivery with natural yoghurt, add a little smoked paprika and some lemon zest, svinome dried mixed herbs and finely sliced cucumber. To jazz up the rice dish, we always saute some onions, peas and egg with turmeric and occasionally a pinch of saffron so we can turn our regular pilau into a yummy fried rice.

Vintry & Mercer

What do you think of these top tips to improve your takeaway? Let us know in the comments below!

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here