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Quick Guide to (Almost) Every Herb and Spice in the Cupboard

For any herb or spice listed below, click on the name to read the full description. We’ll continue adding to this list as we cover more of the seasonings we use in our cooking.

DRIED HERBS AND SPICES

Asafoetida (Asafetida) – Used as a digestive aid in Indian cooking, asafoetida has a strong odor that mellows out into a garlic-onion flavor.

Achiote Paste and Powder – Reddish-brown paste or powder ground from annatto seeds with an earthy flavor. Used primarily in Mexican dishes like mole sauce, chochinita pibil, and tamales.

Allspice – Similar to cloves, but more pungent and deeply flavored. Best used in spice mixes.

Annatto Seeds – A very tough reddish-brown seed with a woodsy aroma and an earthy flavor. Called Achiote Paste (see above) when ground, this is used to flavor many Mexican dishes.

Bay Leaf(also: Indian Bay Leaf) Adds a woodsy background note to soups and sauces.

Caraway Seed – These anise-tasting seeds are essential for soda bread, sauerkraut, and potato salad.

Cardamom – This warm, aromatic spice is widely used in Indian cuisine. It’s also great in baked goods when used in combination with spices like clove and cinnamon.

Cayenne Pepper – Made from dried and ground red chili peppers. Adds a sweet heat to soups, braises, and spice mixes.

Chia Seeds – No, these seeds aren’t just for growing crazy terracotta sculptures! Nearly flavorless, they can be ground into smoothies, cereals, and baked goods for extra nutrition and texture, or even used as a vegan egg substitute.

Cinnamon(also: Vietnamese Cassia Cinnamon) Found in almost every world cuisine, cinnamon serves double duty as spice in both sweet and savory dishes.

Cloves – Sweet and warming spice. Used most often in baking, but also good with braised meat.

Coriander – Earthy, lemony flavor. Used in a lot of Mexican and Indian dishes.

Cumin – Smoky and earthy. Used in a lot of Southwestern US and Mexican cuisine, as well as North African, Middle Eastern, and Indian.

Fennel Seed – Lightly sweet and licorice flavored. It’s excellent with meat dishes, or even chewed on its own as a breath freshener and digestion aid!

Fenugreek – Although this herb smells like maple syrup while cooking, it has a rather bitter, burnt sugar flavor. Found in a lot of Indian and Middle Eastern dishes.

Garlic Powder – Garlic powder is made from dehydrated garlic cloves and can be used to give dishes a sweeter, softer garlic flavor.

Gochugaru – This Korean red pepper spice is hot, sweet, and ever-so-slightly smoky.

Grains of Paradise – These taste like a cross between cardamom, citrus, and black pepper. They add a warming note to many North African dishes.

Loomi – Also called black lime, this is ground from dried limes. Adds a sour kick to many Middle Eastern dishes.

Mace – From the same plant as nutmeg, but tastes more subtle and delicate. Great in savory dishes, especially stews and homemade sausages.

Mahlab – Ground from sour cherry pits, this spice has a nutty and somewhat sour flavor. It’s used in a lot of sweet breads throughout the Middle East.

Nutmeg – Sweet and pungent. Great in baked goods, but also adds a warm note to savory dishes.

Nutritional Yeast – Very different from bread yeast, this can be sprinkled onto or into sauces, pastas, and other dishes to add a nutty, cheesy, savory flavor.

Oregano – Robust, somewhat lemony flavor. Used in a lot of Mexican and Mediterranean dishes.

Paprika(also: Smoked Paprika) Adds a sweet note and a red color. Used in stews and spice blends.

Rosemary – Strong and piney. Great with eggs, beans, and potatoes, as well as grilled meats.

Saffron – Saffron has a subtle but distinct floral flavor and aroma, and it also gives foods a bright yellow color.

Sage – Pine-like flavor, with more lemony and eucalyptus notes than rosemary. Found in a lot of northern Italian cooking.

Smoked Paprika(also: Paprika) Adds sweet smokiness to dishes, as well as a red color.

Star Anise – Whole star anise can be used to add a sweet licorice-y flavor sauces and soups.

Sumac – Zingy and lemony, sumac is a Middle Eastern spice that’s great in marinades and spice rubs.

Turmeric – Sometimes used more for its yellow color than its flavor, turmeric has a mild woodsy flavor. Can be used in place of saffron in a pinch or for those of us on a budget.

Thyme – Adds a pungent, woodsy flavor. Great as an all-purpose seasoning.

Vietnamese Cassia Cinnamon(also: Cinnamon) Sweet and spicy. Can be used in both sweet baked goods and to add depth to savory dishes.

FRESH HERBS

Basil(also: Thai Basil) Highly aromatic with a robust licorice flavor. Excellent in pestos, as a finishing touch on pasta dishes, or stuffed into sandwiches.

Chervil – Delicate anise flavor. Great raw in salads or as a finishing garnish.

Dill – Light and feathery herb with a pungent herb flavor. Use it for pickling, with fish, and over potatoes.

Fenugreek – Although this herb smells like maple syrup while cooking, it has a rather bitter, burnt sugar flavor. Found in a lot of Indian and Middle Eastern dishes.

Lemon Thyme(also: Thyme) Sweet lemon aroma and a fresh lemony-herbal flavor. This is excellent with poultry and in vinaigrettes.

Marjoram – Floral and woodsy. Try it in sauces, vinaigrettes, and marinades.

Mint – Surprisingly versatile for such an intensely flavored herb. Try it paired with lamb, peas, potatoes – and of course, with chocolate!

Oregano – Robust, somewhat lemony flavor. Used in a lot of Mexican and Mediterranean dishes.

Pink Pepper – Small and sweet, these berries are fantastic when marinated with olives or simply sprinkled on shortbread.

Rosemary – Strong and piney. Great with eggs, beans, and potatoes, as well as grilled meats.

Sage – Pine-like flavor, with more lemony and eucalyptus notes than rosemary. Found in a lot of northern Italian cooking.

Summer Savory – Peppery green flavor similar to thyme. Mostly used in roasted meat dishes and stuffing, but also goes well with beans.

Shiso – A member of the mint family, this herb is used extensively in Japanese, Korean, and South East Asian cooking as a wrap for steaming fish and vegetables, in soups, and as a general seasoning.

Tarragon – Strong anise flavor. Can be eaten raw in salads or used to flavor tomato dishes, seafood, or eggs.

Thai Basil(also: Basil) A spicy, edgier cousin to sweet Italian basil. A must-have for Thai stir-fries, Vietnamese pho, spring rolls, and other South Asian dishes.

Thyme(also: Lemon Thyme) Adds a pungent, woodsy flavor. Great as an all-purpose seasoning.

SPICE BLENDS, RUBS, AND MIXES

Baharat – Black pepper, cumin, cinnamon, and cloves. Used to flavor soups, tomato sauces, lentils, rice pilafs, and couscous, and can be a rub for meats. (Middle Eastern)

Bouquet Garni – Thyme, parsley, and bay leaf. Used to flavor broths and soups. (Classic French)

Chili Powder – Ground chilis, cumin, oregano, cayenne, and lots of optional extras to make this seasoning uniquely yours. Use for chili stew, beans, grilled meat, and tacos. (Mexican/Southwestern US)

Chinese Five Spice Powder – Star anise, Szechuan peppercorns, fennel, cassia, and clove. Adds sweetness and depth to savory dishes, especially beef, duck, and pork. (Chinese)

Curry Powder – Typically includes tumeric, coriander, cumin, fenugreek, and red pepper, but mixes can vary. Used primarily to quickly flavor curry sauces. (Indian)

Dukkah – Includes nuts (most often hazelnuts), sesame seeds, coriander, and cumin. Great spice rub for lamb, chicken, and fish. (Egyptian)

Garam Masala – Typcially includes cinnamon, cardamom, cloves, cumin, coriander, nutmeg, and pepper. Sweeter than curry powder. Also used to season curry sauces. (Indian)

Herbes de Provence – Usually savory, rosemary, marjoram, thyme, and sometimes lavender. Use as a marinade or dry rub for roast chicken, fish, and vegetables.

Pickling Spice – Most often, bay leaf, yellow mustard seeds, black peppercorns, allspice, coriander. Used for pickling vegetables in vinegar.

Pumpkin Pie Spice Mix – Cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, and cloves. Used for seasoning pumpkin pie, but also great in other spiced baked goods.

Ras el Hanout – Cardamom, clove, cinnamon, paprika, coriander, cumin, mace, nutmeg, peppercorn, and turmeric. Use as a spice rub on meat or a simple condiment. (North African/Moroccan)

Za’atar Seasoning Blend – Thyme, sumac, and sesame seeds. All-purpose seasoning for many Middle Eastern dishes like grilled meats, grilled vegetables, flatbread and hummus. (Middle Eastern)

Are there any herbs or spices you’ve been wondering about? Let us know and we’ll start adding them to the list!

(This post was originally published February 14, 2010 and last updated March 29, 2011)

(Image: Flickr member enigmachck1 licensed under Creative Commons)

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Merry-Go-‘Round: The Perfect Circle

A Merry-Go-‘Round / We get on it and stay on / As long as we can!

Note on picture:  Taken circa 1997 in the beautiful Appalachian mountains.  Two of the three in the picture have morphed into beautiful creatures with adult-like bodies.  All three are still riding the Merry-Go-‘Round, and so far have managed to keep their balance quite well.

Mgr
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Quick & Easy Fancy Shmancy Yellow Bundt Cake

Bundtcake

So, do you wish you could do some fancy baking sometime?  Yeah, so do I.  Well, the fact of the matter is that I don’t have the time for the fancy stuff, but I sure do have ideas to make the ordinary look fancy (and like you slaved over it)!

Case in point:  A plain yellow cake out-of-a-box can be made to look oh-so-special when you bake it in a bundt pan— just like this!

Incidentally, I cannot take an iota of credit for this… this was baked last evening by my firstborn, an amazing creature who knows how to turn the ordinary into the extraordinary.

Fancy Schmany, indeed! 

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How Did "Muffin Top," "LOL" and "OMG" Get into the Oxford English Dictionary?

On Thursday, teenagers around the world discovered that they weren’t, like, the first generation to use OMG. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, which listed the acronym among its newest crop of word additions, that distinction goes to British Navy Admiral John Arbuthnot Fisher. In 1917, Fisher wrote this sentence in a letter: “I hear that a new order of Knighthood is on the tapis—O.M.G.(Oh! My God!)­—Shower it on the Admiralty!” He sent the letter to Winston Churchill.

Other additions this quarter include muffin top, which was first referenced as a baked good in 1914 and as the flesh roll that hangs over a waistband in 2003. The OED team has also admitted LOL, which first appeared in an electronic archive circa 1990, and a new sense for the word heart: “to love” (as in “I heart Slate“), which was first seen in print in a 1983 Associated Press article. (Some news outlets misreported that the ♥ symbol itself was being added to the OED.)

So how did these words snag a spot in the famous dictionary?

They matched a few key criteria. In order for a word to be chosen, it must be in widespread, frequent use. The general population should understand it. (Yes, you might need to explain LOL to your grandma. But most people have a sense of what it means). Since the OED doesn’t simply define a word, but records its entire usage history, a word must also have a substantive lifespan before it wins a coveted entry. “We are quite cautious about including things,” says Graeme Diamond, the principal editor of the New Words Group in the OED. “We want a word to have led a bit of a life before we write its biography.”

As far as what constitutes “a bit of a life,” there are no hard and fast rules for length of usage, or even usage frequency. Diamond says the minimum lifespan is generally five years, but that’s not always the case. Some words get an expedited inclusion if they seem historically significant. Jesse Sheidlower, an Oxford English Dictionary editor-at-large and Slate contributor, recalls AIDS as one word that was added in quickly.

But since words are never removed from the OED, even if they eventually fade from everyday language, they must pass a certain threshold of usage. “We want to be sure that we’re dealing with something that, if only for a while, was a genuine piece of the English language,” says Diamond. Usage frequency can be tricky to quantify, especially for acronyms like OMG and LOL, which matured primarily over the Internet before moving into verbal speech. Diamond says there’s no special editorial process for such nebulous Internet vernacular. Actually, since the lexicographers were able to find written verification for both OMG and LOL, it was relatively easy to document their uses throughout time. This can be trickier when a nominated word is used primarily in oral communication. In that case, lexicographers often rely on television and film scripts.

So what’s next for the OED? Diamond says the New Words Group is currently monitoring Twitter-speak. “We don’t know if the Twitter phenomenon will continue, and we don’t know how those words will extend,” he says, explaining that tweet could start to mean sharing an opinion in a broader sense. “We want to learn if that will happen before sharing the story of the word.”

Just in case you were wondering…

I-dunno-lol

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Late Night Post-Concert Celebrations At The Neighborhood Grille

Two-and-a-half hours of listening to the most fantastic live music ranging from several marching band tunes to Tchaikowsky’s Symphony No. 4 in F Minor will leave you physically ravenous at the end of the concert.  Trust me.  I would know, given that I was a thrilled spectator in the audience of just such a concert last evening.  And so, one can only imagine how much more ravenous the players in that concert might have been.  Well, I would know that too!  Given that two of those players belong to me as I was one of the proud parents witnessing the incredible performances that they were part of.  A post to aforementioned incredible concert is right here.

Well, so where does one go when its getting late and you want a quick bite?  You go to the local neighborhood grille, of course, aka, Applebees.  Their Appetizer Sampler is perfect for four people because there’s two of everything:  Mozzarella Sticks, Boneless Hot Chicken Fingers, Quesadilla Corners, and lots of Nachos with four kinds of Dips, including a Hot Spinach-Artichoke one.  And as for desserts, well, the Triple-Chocolate Meltdown and the Maple Butter Blondie hit the spot right-on. 

And what did we wash all this down with?  Why, the Classic Mojitos, of course.  Oh, and Diet Sodas for the teetotalers, of course.

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Patiala House, 2011

Patialahouse

Was it mere coincidence that this movie was released in the midst of the international cricket season?  If it wasn’t, it was certainly good timing.  Regardless, Patiala House is is the latest Bollywood offering of a story that embodies in equal parts love of cricket and love of family.  But to truly appreciate the quirky storyline, one must view it through the cultural lens of the strong and strange ties of family in the Indian family schema and how powerful those ties can be even to the extent of sometimes permanently squashing every little smidgen of individuality.  While this may seem terribly improbable from a Western point of view, one truly doesn’t give it a second thought while immersed in such an environment within the confines of the motherland.

And yet, when the Indian diaspora in a London suburb are confronted with the possibilities of a well-examined life, they are slow but sure to begin to poke holes through millenia of orthodox-thinking and customs.  Which is what the story of Gattu and his family is all about.  If you think Gattu’s love of cricket is the driving force of the story, it may be rivaled by the swell of family that surrounds him.  This same family carries out so effective an intervention with Gattu that they become the proverbial wind beneath his wings.  And fly he does.  And very gracefully, at that.  In the face of rumor and ignominy to his father (who acts like a complete cad for the better part of the story), it is Gattu who takes the higher road to bring about reconciliation.

Well, as they say, God’s in his heaven and all’s well with the world!  Oh, by that way, that Sharma girl is growing on me.  This is the second movie I’ve seen her in after that one called Band Baja Baarat. 

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Sixty-First Annual Bands In Review 2011: An Evening To Remember

Last evening was yet another one for the files.  It was the 61st Annual Bands In Review 2011 musical extravaganza presented by the Music Department of the Ann Arbor Public Schools.

The program consisted of an amazing lineup of pieces of every genre, contemporary and classical, and featured the talents of four of the local Middle-School bands, all three bands of the Huron High school (Varsity, Concert, and Symphony), and the amazing Symphony Band of Pioneer High School.

My firstborn plays the alto-saxophone in HHS’s Concert Band.  Of the two pieces they played, the one recorded and presented here is the Puenteareas, a Pasa Doble tune.  Membership in this band is by audition and invitation.

HuronConcertBand.Sana.m4a
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My secondborn plays the flute in HHS’s Varsity Band.  Of the two pieces they played, the one recorded and presented here is the El Capeo, another Pasa Doble tune.

HuronVarsityBand.Samira.m4a
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 The third recording is the Tchaikowsky piece (see Program Notes) presented by the HHS’ Symphony Band.

HuronSymphonyBand.m4a
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Absolutely outstanding performances by all bands, although, you’ll understand that I thought the Varsity and Concert Bands were by far the best!

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Tandoori Chicken: The Ubiquitous Indian Dish

Tanchick

Well, I’m sure you’ve had your share of Tandoori Chicken at sometime, somewhere.  It is one of the most common Indian dishes found on most menus, especially those that carry North Indian cuisine.  And you most likely have made it at home as well at sometime or another.

I certainly have, and although I don’t have an outdoor tandoor (oven), I use my trusty conventional oven to make mine.  Easy marinade the night before consists of:  yogurt, lemon-juice, ginger, garlic, salt, and one packet each of Chicken Tikka Masala and Chicken Tandoori Masala.  The next day, lay out the marinated pieces in flat drip-pans, cover with foil, and put inside a 410 degree preheated oven for 45 minutes.  Uncover once, turn over and squirt with oil.  Broil on high for the last 7 minutes.

That’s it.  Easy as pie.  Or Tandoori Chicken!

I forgot to take pictures of the trays after they came out of the oven, but fortunately remembered to take one of my plate!  You’ll just have to take my word for what it was truly like:  it was the kind that would make you go, Yeh Hui Na Baat!  Check out the slideshow below for the few simple steps to make it anytime: