The Science of Spice

(Jacob Rumans) #1

99


MAHLEB


Mb


Flavour Group | SWEET WARMING PHENOLS | Mahleb


RELEASE THE FLAVOUR


Of mahleb’s flavour compounds, only
dioxolane and some bitter phenols are
soluble in water to any great extent.
Cooking in a water-based liquid will
therefore result in a “green” and bitter
taste and should be avoided.

BLENDING SCIENCE


A lactone called coumarin produces mahleb’s creamy taste, like sweet clover
and apricot. Almond notes come from methoxyethyl cinnamate, and the spice
also contains woody, peppery azulene and balsamic, fruity pentanol, as well as
green-apple-like dioxolane. Bitterness in the fresh spice comes from phenols.

FOOD PARTNERS


Stone fruit Use ground mahleb to
thicken a sweet cherry sauce, add it to a
plum crumble topping, or sprinkle it over
roasted apricots or peaches.

Meat Add to a Turkish dry spice rub
for roast duck legs, pork, or lamb.

Baking Include mahleb with other
warm spices in festive bakes, or add it to
the sweet dough for an apricot tart.

Ice cream Sprinkle into cherry ice
cream and top with candied pistachios.

Tonka beans Partner with vanilla-
like tonka beans, which are similarly high
in coumarin, in sweet recipes.

combine with other
warming spices:
cinnamon and
cassia contribute
sweet, spicy, woody
qualities
galangal contains
a similar cinnamate
compound and hints of
cherry, adding a
penetrating pungency
ginger adds
hotness and sweet,
citrusy notes

pair with sweet
spices or those with
creamy nuances:
clove contributes
sweet, astringent,
camphorous notes
nutmeg adds
warm spiciness
liquorice brings
sweetness and
eucalyptus-like notes,
and sometimes
contains coumarin-like
substances

vanilla lends rich,
mellow creaminess

complement the
sweet woodiness
of mahleb:
sesame brings
harmonizing nutty and
bready flavours; pale,
unroasted seeds also
have a creamy taste
cacao adds bitter
chocolate notes,
pairing well with the
sweet coumarin

pair with spices
that either contain
pentanol or enhance
its flavour:
poppy seeds
contain pentanol
and add earthiness
lemon myrtle has
distinctive green
odours from the fruity
tasting heptanone,
and adds a powerful
lemon-lime flavour

METHOXYETHYL


CINNAMATE


warming | balsamic |
fruity

COUMARIN


sweet | floral |
grassy

AZULENE


woody | peppery |
herbal

PENTANOL


balsamic | fruity |
floral

Kitchen


creativity


Mahleb is luxuriously sweet and fruity, with an almond aroma and a woody
cherry taste; whole kernels also release a bitterness when chewed. Mainly
known as a baking spice, it can add fruit-and-nut notes to savoury dishes.

Add to fats before
mixing into a recipe
to allow sweet and
woody flavours to
come to the fore.

Application of heat
will decrease the
bitter flavours and
allow hints of cherry
fruitiness to emerge.

Grind kernels to
release short-lived
oils. Leave for a
few minutes before
use to let bitter
phenols evaporate.

098-099_Mahleb.indd 99 04/06/2018 15:47

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