Spice
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encyclopedia
primarily used for flavoring, coloring or preserving
food. Sometimes a spice is used to hide other flavors.[1]
Spices are distinguished from herbs, which are parts of leafy green plants also used for flavoring or as garnish.
Many spices have antimicrobial
properties. This may explain why spices are more commonly used in warmer
climates, which have more infectious disease, and why use of spices is especially prominent in meat,
which is particularly susceptible to spoiling.[2]
A spice may have other uses,
including medicinal, religious ritual, cosmetics or perfume production, or as a vegetable. For example, turmeric
roots are consumed as a vegetable[citation needed] and garlic as an antibiotic.[3]
Classification
and types
Botanical
basis
- Dried fruits or seeds, such as fennel,
mustard, and black pepper
- Arils,
such as mace
- Barks,
such as cinnamon and cassia
- Dried flower buds, such as cloves
- Stigmas,
such as saffron
- Roots
and rhizomes,
such as turmeric, ginger and galingale
- Resins,
such as asafoetida
Common
spice mixtures
- Advieh
(Iran)
- Baharat
(Arab world, and the Middle East in general)
- Berbere
(Ethiopia
and Eritrea)
- Chaat masala (India and Pakistan)
- Chili powder
- Curry powder
- Five-spice powder (China)
- Garam masala (South Asia)
- Harissa
(North Africa)
- Hawaij
(Yemen)
- Jerk spice (Jamaica)
- Khmeli suneli (Georgia, former U.S.S.R.)
- Masala
(a generic name for any blend of spices used in South Asia)
- Mixed spice (United Kingdom)
- Old Bay Seasoning (United States)
- Panch phoron (India and Bangladesh)
- Pumpkin pie spice (United States)
- Quatre épices (France)
- Ras el hanout (North Africa)
- Shichimi togarashi (Japan)
- Vegeta
(Croatia)
- Za'atar
(Middle East)
- Sharena sol (literally "colourful salt", Bulgaria)
- contains summer savory, paprika, fenugreek
and salt.
History
Early
history
Humans were using spices in 50,000 BCE[citation needed]. The spice trade developed throughout South Asia
and Middle East in around 2000 BCE with cinnamon
and pepper, and in East Asia
with herbs and pepper. The Egyptians used herbs for embalming
and their demand for exotic herbs helped stimulate world trade. The word spice
comes from the Old French word espice, which became epice, and
which came from the Latin root spec, the noun referring to
"appearance, sort, kind": species
has the same root. By 1000 BCE, medical systems based upon herbs could be found
in China, Korea, and India. Early uses were connected with magic, medicine,
religion, tradition, and preservation.[4]
Archaeological excavations have
uncovered clove burnt onto the floor of a kitchen, dated to 1700 BCE, at the
Mesopotamian site of Terqa, in modern-day Syria.[5]
The ancient Indian epic Ramayana mentions cloves. The Romans
had cloves in the 1st century CE, as Pliny the Elder
wrote about them.[citation needed]
In the story of Genesis, Joseph was sold into slavery by his brothers to spice merchants.
In the biblical poem Song of Solomon,
the male speaker compares his beloved to many forms of spices. Generally, early
Egyptian, Chinese, Indian, and Mesopotamian
sources do not refer to known spices.[citation needed]
In South Asia,
nutmeg,
which originates from the Banda Islands
in the Molukas, has a Sanskrit name.[clarification needed] Sanskrit
is the ancient language of India, showing how old the usage of this spice is in
this region.[original research?] Historians believe that nutmeg was introduced to Europe in
the 6th century BCE.[6]
Indonesian merchants traveled around
China, India, the Middle East, and the east coast of Africa. Arab merchants facilitated the routes
through the Middle East and India. This resulted in the Egyptian port city
of Alexandria
being the main trading center for spices. The most important discovery prior to
the European spice trade were the monsoon winds (40 CE). Sailing from Eastern
spice growers to Western European consumers gradually replaced the land-locked
spice routes once facilitated by the Middle East Arab caravans.[4]
Middle
Ages
Spices were among the most demanded
and expensive products available in Europe in the Middle Ages,
the most common being black pepper, cinnamon (and the cheaper alternative cassia), cumin, nutmeg, ginger and cloves. Given medieval medicine's main theory of humorism,
spices and herbs were indispensable to balance "humors" in food,[7]
a daily basis for good health at a time of recurrent pandemics.
Spices were all imported from
plantations in Asia and Africa, which made them expensive. From the 8th until
the 15th century, the Republic of Venice had the monopoly on spice trade with the Middle East, and
along with it the neighboring Italian city-states. The trade made the region
rich. It has been estimated that around 1,000 tons of pepper and
1,000 tons of the other common spices were imported into Western Europe
each year during the Late Middle Ages. The value of these goods was the equivalent of a yearly
supply of grain for 1.5 million people.[8]
The most exclusive was saffron, used as much for its vivid yellow-red color as for its
flavor. Spices that have now fallen into obscurity in European cuisine include grains of paradise, a relative of cardamom
which most replaced pepper in late medieval north French cooking, long pepper,
mace,
spikenard,
galangal
and cubeb.
Early
modern period
The control of trade routes and the
spice-producing regions were the main reasons that Portuguese
navigator Vasco da Gama sailed to India in 1499. Spain and Portugal
were not happy to pay the high price that Venice demanded for spices. At around
the same time, Christopher Columbus returned from the New World,
he described to investors new spices available there.[citation needed]
Another source of competition in the
spice trade during the 15th and 16th century was the Ragusans from the maritime
republic of Dubrovnik in southern Croatia.[9]
The military prowess of Afonso de Albuquerque (1453–1515) allowed the Portuguese to take control of the
sea routes to India. In 1506, he took the island of Socotra
in the mouth of the Red Sea and, in 1507, Ormuz in the Persian Gulf.
Since becoming the viceroy of the Indies, he took Goa in India in 1510, and Malacca
on the Malay peninsula in 1511. The Portuguese could now trade directly with Siam,
China,
and the Moluccas.
The Silk Road
complemented the Portuguese sea routes, and brought the treasures of the Orient to Europe via Lisbon, including many spices.[citation needed]
With the discovery of the New World
came new spices, including allspice, bell and chili peppers, vanilla, and
chocolate. This development kept the spice trade, with America as a late comer
with its new seasonings, profitable well into the 19th century.[citation needed]
In the Caribbean, the island of
Grenada is well known[clarification needed] for
growing and exporting a number of spices, including the nutmeg, which was
introduced to Grenada by the settlers.[citation needed]
Handling
spices
A spice may be available in several
forms: fresh, whole dried, or pre-ground dried. Generally, spices are dried.[10]
A whole dried spice has the longest shelf life, so it can be purchased and
stored in larger amounts, making it cheaper on a per-serving basis. Some spices
are rarely available either fresh or whole, for example turmeric,
and must be purchased in ground form. Small seeds, such as fennel and mustard
seeds, are used both whole and in powder form.
The flavor of a spice is derived in
part from compounds that oxidize or evaporate when exposed to air. Grinding a spice greatly
increases its surface area and so increases the rates of oxidation and
evaporation. Thus, flavor is maximized by storing a spice whole and grinding
when needed. The shelf life of a whole spice is roughly two years; of a ground
spice roughly six months.[11]
The "flavor life" of a ground spice can be much shorter.[12]
Ground spices are better stored away from light.[13]
To grind a whole spice, the classic
tool is mortar and pestle. Less labor-intensive tools are more common now: a microplane
or fine grater
can be used to grind small amounts; a coffee grinder[14]
is useful for larger amounts. A frequently used spice such as black pepper may
merit storage in its own hand grinder or mill.
Some flavor elements in spices are
soluble in water; many are soluble in oil or fat. As a general rule, the
flavors from a spice take time to infuse into the food so spices are added
early in preparation.[15]
Nutrition
Because they tend to have strong
flavors and are used in small quantities, spices tend to add few calories to
food, even though many spices, especially those made from seeds, contain high
portions of fat, protein, and carbohydrate by weight. Many spices, however, can
contribute significant portions of micronutrients to the diet. For example, a
teaspoon of paprika contains about 1133 IU of Vitamin A,
which is over 20% of the recommended daily allowance specified by the US FDA.[16]
When used in larger quantity, spices can also contribute a substantial amount
of minerals, including iron, magnesium, calcium, and many others, to the diet.
Most herbs and spices have
substantial antioxidant activity, owing primarily to phenolic
compounds, especially flavonoids, which influence nutrition through many pathways, including
affecting the absorption of other nutrients. One study found cumin and fresh ginger to be highest in antioxidant
activity.[17]
These antioxidants also can act as natural preservatives, preventing or slowing
the spoilage of food, leading to a higher nutritional content in stored food.
The entire wiki link can be found
at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spice
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