The dent on the basins is almost unnoticeable🥰
Planning on purchasing 3 more quality is amazing too
Great product I will order again
This was excellent choice. Love it.
TL;DR
Curry burns when starch / dairy hits a hot-spot at the pan bottom. Fix order: (1) lower heat, (2) more oil at start, (3) onions before tomatoes, (4) better pot. If (1)–(3) don't fix it, the pot is the problem. Replace with BV NC3 Heavy Duty Set (R899) for aluminium or Capsule Sandwich SS (R899) for induction.
The 5 Curry Burn Fixes (In Order)
1. Heat Too High — Try one notch lower. If burner goes out, use a heat diffuser.
2. Oil Layer Too Thin — Start with 2–3 tbsp oil before onions; oil acts as a thermal buffer.
3. Onion-Before-Tomato Sequencing — Onions caramelise first → thick paste forms → buffers the bottom. Adding tomato too early dumps acidic liquid onto a hot dry surface.
4. Stirring Technique — Stir from the edge inward, lifting bottom layer.
5. Pot Bottom Too Thin — Final fallback. Heavy-bottom aluminium ≥3mm or sandwich-bottom SS solves what technique can't.
Pot Replacement — Which One?
| Current Pot | Likely Failure | Replacement |
|---|---|---|
| Thin aluminium <2mm | Hot-spot under burner | Sapphire S7 (3mm base) — R599 |
| Single-ply SS | No heat spread | Capsule Sandwich SS — R899+ |
| Old non-stick (worn) | Coating degraded | Tiger NS15 set R1,999 |
| Catering pot too thin | Burner ring concentration | BV NC3 Heavy Duty Set — R899 |
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The dent on the basins is almost unnoticeable🥰
Planning on purchasing 3 more quality is amazing too
Great product I will order again
This was excellent choice. Love it.