The Science of Spice

(Jacob Rumans) #1

Flavour Group | EARTHY TERPENES | Cumin 127


Sulphur brings
flavours of green
vegetables and
roast meats

Pyrazines bring
mainly nutty,
roasted flavours

RELEASE THE FLAVOUR


Cumin is particularly responsive to
toasting: bruise and dry fry the seeds
to produce roasted-tasting pyrazines.
Some new toasted compounds also
contain sulphur.

BLENDING SCIENCE


Cumin’s uniquely musky, spicy flavour derives from cuminaldehyde, a compound
found in found in roast beef and cinnamon but sparingly in other spices. Oher
important compounds include pinene, which gives the spice its dry, pinewood
nuance, and cymene, which has a fresh, turpentine-like aroma.

FOOD PARTNERS


Aubergine and root vegetables
Toast and crush seeds for sprinkling
over roasted aubergine, a beetroot dip,
or puréed roots.

Pulses Use as a flavouring for dhal
and other lentil stews, in falafel mix, and
scattered over hummus.

Beef and lamb Add a pinch of
ground cumin to minced lamb for
Moorish-style kebabs, or to beef rendang,
Mexican mole, and chilli con carne.

Salt Toast seeds and then grind with
an equal quantity of sea salt, for sprinkling
over roast chicken, tomato salad, avocado
toast, tacos, or roast potatoes.

Yogurt Combine cumin seeds,
yogurt, and lemon to make a dressing for
roasted vegetables or a salad of bitter
leaves, such as mustard greens or kale.

Kitchen


creativity


bring out woodiness with
other pinenes:
black pepper adds warmth
and enhances the mild pungency

black cardamom’s
smokiness also works with
cumin’s earthy side

pair with sweet spices to
complement its tenacious
warming qualities:
cinnamon, cardamom bring
sweet warmth, and carry some
cuminaldehyde

nutmeg matches well for
warming muskiness, also
sharing pinene

use cymene to bridge with
other spices’ flavours:
star anise and anise add
liquorice with eucalyptus

coriander is citrus and floral
to balance cumin’s bitterness
ajwain gives an intensely
herbal thyme-like flavour
nigella adds a charred,
mustard-onion spiciness

CUMINALDEHYDE


bitter | herby |
earthy

PINENE


pine | fresh |
conifer wood

CYMENE


woody | citrus |
harsh

BLENDS TO TRY


Try these recipes for classic blends
featuring cumin, or why not adapt
them with some blending science?
Turkish baharat p23
Za'atar p22
Advieh p27
Dukkah p28
Hawaij p29
Chaat masala p42
Shandong spice bag p58
BBQ rub p68

Cumin is an essential component of Indian, North African, Levantine, and Mexican
cuisine. Used alone or in combination with other spices, it imbues a diverse range
of savoury dishes with its distinctive, highly aromatic, and pungent flavour.

CUMIN


Cu


126-127_Cumin.indd 127 13/06/2018 16:23

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