There are also things I simply don't like (alas, cumin is one of them...).
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Anne Miller wrote:The thing about cumin is that is not a spice. It is a thickening agent.
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Christopher Weeks wrote:
Anne Miller wrote:The thing about cumin is that is not a spice. It is a thickening agent.
This strikes me as a pretty exceptional stance. Can you tell me more about what you mean?
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"The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance."~Ben Franklin
"We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light." ~ Plato
Carla Burke wrote:I'm sorry, Christopher. I just can't choose only one.
Anna Hutchins wrote:Oh yeah, I forgot about black pepper. That's the real one I use the most. It's just so unassuming that I forget about it....
Also why do people like star anise? Ick! (I'll tolerate it in pho.)
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Christopher Weeks wrote:
Anne Miller wrote:The thing about cumin is that is not a spice. It is a thickening agent.
This strikes me as a pretty exceptional stance. Can you tell me more about what you mean?
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
SKIP books, get 'em while they're hot!!! Skills to Inherit Property
See me in a movie building a massive wood staircase:Low Tech Lab Movie
"The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance."~Ben Franklin
"We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light." ~ Plato
Christopher Weeks wrote:Starting a chili by toasting a whole lot of cumin seeds.
Timothy Norton wrote:toasting cumin
Christopher Weeks wrote:OK, I know it may seem like a silly question when we should all know it's cumin, but I just read someone say they don't like it, the poor dear!
There are also things I simply don't like (alas, cumin is one of them...).
And it got me wondering! For those of you similarly disordered, what do you think is the best spice?
(In all seriousness I go through half a cup of cumin seeds per month. I probably go through that much black pepper, but I don't relish it the same way.)
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Maieshe Ljin wrote:I also consider cumin a favorite, and so too for its cousins, caraway and wild cumin (Bunium persicum). They have slightly different places where they are best used.
Black and cayenne pepper are good too, and turmeric, and bee balm flowers are very good on eggs.
The "best spice" begs the question of what are you making? If it is versatility that defines that, the idea that adding this spice in isolation will benefit the flavor of most foods, whatever they might be, maybe it is black pepper, which has a relatively pure flavor that goes well with different foods.
We could also say the best spice is whatever would be better for a given food, season, climate, particular location, and person. In which case I would say--for me, right here, at this point in the year, would have to be either chopped balsam fir needles or mountain mint.
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