Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Fibres and Fibre Yielding Plants
- 3 Cereal Crops
- 4 Sugars, Starches and Cellulose Products
- 5 Legumes or Pulses
- 6 Vegetable Oils and Fats
- 7 Fruits and Nuts
- 8 Vegetables
- 9 Spices, Condiments and Other Flavourings
- 10 Fumitory and Masticatory Materials
- 11 Beverages
- 12 Wood and its Uses
- 13 Vegetable Tannins and Dyestuffs
- 14 Rubber
- 15 Medicinal Plants
- 16 Insecticides and Herbicides
- 17 Essential Oil Yielding Plants
- 18 Plant Diversity and its Conservation
- 19 Petrocrops: Our Future Fuels
- 20 Ethnobotany: An Integrated Approach
- References
- Index
9 - Spices, Condiments and Other Flavourings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2018
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Fibres and Fibre Yielding Plants
- 3 Cereal Crops
- 4 Sugars, Starches and Cellulose Products
- 5 Legumes or Pulses
- 6 Vegetable Oils and Fats
- 7 Fruits and Nuts
- 8 Vegetables
- 9 Spices, Condiments and Other Flavourings
- 10 Fumitory and Masticatory Materials
- 11 Beverages
- 12 Wood and its Uses
- 13 Vegetable Tannins and Dyestuffs
- 14 Rubber
- 15 Medicinal Plants
- 16 Insecticides and Herbicides
- 17 Essential Oil Yielding Plants
- 18 Plant Diversity and its Conservation
- 19 Petrocrops: Our Future Fuels
- 20 Ethnobotany: An Integrated Approach
- References
- Index
Summary
Before turning our attention to spices, it would seem pertinent to know what they are and how they differ from condiments. In fact, it is difficult to draw a distinction between the two. Broadly speaking, spices are aromatic vegetable products of tropical origin that are used, in a pulverised state, primarily for seasoning or garnishing foods and beverages.They are characterised by pungency, strong odour and sweet or bitter taste. Included in this category are hard or hardened parts of plants, such as pepper, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, ginger, turmeric, nutmeg and mace, allspice and vanilla. In ancient times, they were valued as basic components of incense, embalming preservatives, ointments, perfumes, antidotes against poison, cosmetics and medicines, and were little used in food. It was only in the first century AD that spices found their way into the kitchen.
Condiments, on the other hand, are spices or other flavourings having a sharp taste and are usually added to food after cooking.
However, when the aromatic vegetable product comes from a temperate plant, it is considered as a culinary herb as in the case of bay leaves, coriander, cumin, dill, fennel, fenugreek, mustard seed, parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme, to mention a few. Essences are aqueous or alcoholic extractions of the essential oils.
The Quest for Spices
The story of spices, condiments and other flavouring materials is one of the most romantic and fascinating chapters in the history of vegetable products as they are connected with many important events in man's history, including geographical discovery, economic warfare, annexation of territories and all the vices of theft, envy and hatred of which man is capable. Historically, spices have been responsible for the rise and fall of empires and the great sea voyages to explore the distant corners of the globe. The search for spices by early European explorers led to the discovery of new continents and waterways.The westward voyages of Christopher Columbus were primarily intended to reach the ‘Spice Island’ of the Far East, but he failed in his basic objective. However, it resulted in the discovery of America. Although Columbus and his men did not find groves of nutmeg and cloves and jungles of pepper and cinnamon in the New World, they discovered some valuable and entirely new species, such as allspice and red pepper.
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- Economic BotanyA Comprehensive Study, pp. 365 - 401Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016