The Science of Spice

(Jacob Rumans) #1

121


ROSE


Ro


Flavour Group | FRAGRANT TERPENES | Rose


BLEND TO TRY


Use and adapt this classic blend,
suitable for sweet or savoury dishes:
Advieh p27

RELEASE THE FLAVOUR


Rose’s most potent flavour compounds
are oil-soluble, but can easily overpower
a dish: this is one spice that benefits from
being used in a water-based way. Even
so, rosewater contains several hundred
flavour compounds, which give it a
complex subtle flavour.

BLENDING SCIENCE


Rose’s flavour profile is dominated by terpene flavour compounds that have a sweet, floral
character, including geraniol, nerol, eugenol, and linalool. The unique rose aroma is produced
by potent flavour compounds called “rose ketones”, which provide fresh green notes, herby
spiciness, woody sweetness, and berry-like notes.

FOOD PARTNERS


Cherries Add to stewed cherries and
use instead of jam in a tart.

Vegetables Add dried petals to
harissa and serve with grilled vegetables.

Chicken Sprinkle crushed petals into
a Moroccan-style chicken stew.

Mackerel Serve grilled mackerel
with couscous scented with ground
rose petals.

Shortbread Add a few crushed
dried rose petals to the dough for
shortbread biscuit.

Ice cream Use ground petals or
rosewater to make rose ice cream.

combine with
more nerol spices
or those adding
complex sweetness:
lemongrass
lends citrus notes,
mild pepperiness,
and slight spiciness,
also shares linalool

vanilla has rich,
mellow creaminess
and complex flavours
that including subtle
cherry notes

combine with
other geraniol-
carrying spices:
ginger adds
pungent warmth and
citrus notes, and also
shares linalool

nutmeg used
sparingly brings a
warm, earthy
spiciness, and also
shares eugenol

pair with other
eugenol-rich spices
to boost penetrating
menthol nuances:
allspice provides
sweet peppery
flavours

clove adds
sweet, astringent,
eucalyptus-like notes

combine with
other linalools
to add floral
complexity:
cinnamon, cassia
contributes warming
sweetness, with a
touch of bitterness
from cassia

coriander provides
a powerful citrus
spiciness alongside
floral qualities

LINALOOL


floral | woody |
spicy

GERANIOL


floral | sweet |
lingering

NEROL


orange blossom |
sweet | fresh

EUGENOL


medicinal |
woody | warming

Kitchen


creativity


Rose petals add sweet floral aromas to both sweet and savoury dishes. The petals
of any unsprayed scented rose can be used, but those cultivated specifically for
consumption have a more potent flavour than garden roses.

Make your own rosewater by steeping
rose petals in water. Allow several days
for the flavour compounds to slowly
dissolve into the liquid.

120-121_Rose.indd 121 13/07/2018 11:42

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