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From the Encyclopedia of Spices ...

 

*Smile*

Chris (list mom)

 

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Cumin

Cuminum cyminum

Fam Umbelliferae

 

Cumin is native to the Levant and Upper Egypt. It now grows in most hot

countries, especially India, North Africa, China and the Americas. The

spice is especially associated with Morocco, where it is often smelt in

the abundant street cookery of the medinas. Cumin was known to the

Egyptians five millennia ago; the seeds have been found in the Old

Kingdon Pyramids. The Romans and the Greeks used it medicinally and

cosmetically to induce a pallid complexion. In Indian recipes, cumin is

frequently confused with caraway, which it resembles in appearance

though not in taste, cumin being far more powerful. This is due to a

misunderstanding of the Indian word jeera. The term usually means cumin,

but can occasionally mean caraway, so in doubtful cases, cumin is

generally to be understood. The use of the terms ‘black cumin’ for

nigella, and ‘sweet cumin’ for aniseed or fennel, further confounds this

confusion. As a general rule interpret jeera or zeera (jira, zira) as

cumin and kalonji as nigella. When the seeds themselves are in doubt,

cumin is easily distinguished from the other Umbelliferae by its

flavour, and its shape and colour is quite different from nigella.

Classically, cumin symbolised greed; thus the avaricious Roman Emperor,

Marcus Aurelius, came to be known privately as ‘Cuminus’

 

 

Spice Description

Cumin is the seed of a small umbelliferous plant. The seeds come as

paired or separate carpels, and are 3-6mm (1/8-1/4 in) long. They have a

striped pattern of nine ridges and oil canals, and are hairy, brownish

in colour, boat-shaped, tapering at each extremity, with tiny stalks

attached. They resemble caraway seeds, but are lighter in colour and

unlike caraway, have minute bristles hardly visible to the naked eye.

They are available dried, or ground to a brownish-green powder. Cumin is

freely available in the West, although it is not a traditional European

spice.

Bouquet: Strong, heavy and warm. A spicy-sweet aroma.

Flavour: Pungent, powerful, sharp and slightly bitter.

Hotness scale: 3

 

Preparation and Storage

The seeds should be lightly roasted before being used whole or ground to

bring out the aroma. Cumin may also be pounded with other spices in

mixtures such as curry powder. Ground cumin must be kept airtight, to

retain its pungency. This spice should be used with restraint - it can

exclude all the other flavours in a dish. Less than a teaspoon of it

will flavour a meal for four.

 

Culinary Uses

Cumin is used mainly where highly spiced foods are preferred. It

features in Indian, Eastern, Middle Eastern, Mexican, Portuguese and

Spanish cookery. It is an ingredient of most curry powders and many

savoury spice mixtures, and is used in stews, grills - especially lamb -

and chicken dishes. It gives bite to plain rice, and to beans and cakes.

Small amounts can be usefully used in aubergine and kidney bean dishes.

Cumin is essential in spicy Mexican foods such as chile con carne,

casseroled pork and enchiladas with chili sauce. In Europe, cumin

flavours certain Portuguese sausages, and is used to spice cheese,

especially Dutch Leyden and German Munster, and burned with woods to

smoke cheeses and meats. It is a pickling ingredient for cabbage and

Sauerkraut, and is used in chutneys. In the Middle East, it is a

familiar spice for fish dishes, grills and stews and flavours couscous -

semolina steamed over meat and vegetables, the national dish of Morocco.

Zeera pani is a refreshing and appetising Indian drink made from cumin

and tamarind water. Cumin together with caraway flavours Kummel, the

famous German liquer.

 

Attributed Medicinal Properties

Cumin is stomachic, diuretic, carminative, stimulant, astringent,

emmenagogic and antispasmodic. It is valuable in dyspepsia diarrhoea and

hoarseness, and may relieve flatulence and colic. In the West, it is now

used mainly in veterinary medicine, as a carminative, but it remains a

traditional herbal remedy in the East. It is supposed to increase

lactation and reduce nausea in pregnancy. Used in a poultice, it

relieves swelling of the breast or the testicles. Smoke in a pipe with

ghee, it is taken to relieve the hiccups, Cumin stimulates the appetite.

 

Plant Description and Cultivation

A small, slender, glabrous herbaceous annual, of the parsley family. It

usually reaches 25 cm (10 in) (some varieties can be double this

height),and tends to droop under its own weight. The blue-green linear

leaves are finely divided, and the white or pink flowers are borne in

small compound umbels. Cumin is grown from seed. A hot climate is

preferred, but it can be grown in cooler regions if started under glass

in spring. A sandy soil is best; when the seedlings have hardened,

transplant carefully to a sunny aspect, planting out 15cm (6 in) apart.

Seed regularly. The plants bloom in June and July. The seeds are

normally ready four months after planting. Cut the plants when the seeds

turn to brown, thresh and dry like the other Umbelliferae.

 

 

Other Names

Anise Acre, Cumin Acre, Cummin, Sweet Cumin

French: cumin

German: Kreuzkümmel, Romische Kümmel

Italian: cumino

Spanish: comino

Arabic: kammun, kemouyn

Indian: jeera, jeraka, jira, zeera, zira, sufaid..., safed...(white),

kala...(black), kalonji(cf Nigella)

Indonesian: (d)jinten

Malay: jintan puteh

Sinhalese: cheeregum, jeera, su(du)duru

Tamil: cheeregum

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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