The Science of Spice

(Jacob Rumans) #1

What Is a Spice? 11


Black pepper
Peppercorns are the
small dried berries
of one of around a
thousand different
flowering vine species
in the plant family
Piperaceae.

Clove
The nail-shaped,
dark brown clove
is neither a seed
nor a dried fruit,
but the dried
flower bud of an
evergreen tree
from Indonesia.

Star anise
The seeds of this
strikingly shaped spice
are contained within
a woody protective
covering, called a
carpel, where much
of the flavour is in
fact concentrated.

Fresh cloves
are picked when
the buds have
developed a
pinkish tint

Unpicked buds
open into flowers
with frothy heads
of stamens

Seed pods
(fruits) are
harvested when
still unripe and
allowed to dry

Fully ripe berries are
pink-red in colour; black
and green peppercorns are
picked when underripe

Berries are carried
in clusters on spikes

Insect repellence
The heat from pepper is produced
by a chemical called piperine
which, as well as irritating hot
pain nerves on the tongue, is
highly repellent to insects and has
been harnessed by the chemical
industry as an insecticide.

Health protection
Star anise’s dominant flavour comes
from anethole, a substance that
appears to have evolved to fight off
infections and repel insects, and
which incidentally has an appealing
taste – 13 times sweeter than sugar


  • to the animal tongue.


Pollinator attraction
Clove contains a high concentration
of eugenol, a chemical with a warm,
eucalyptus-like fragrance and sweet
effect on the tongue. In the living
plant, eugenol serves to attract
pollinating insects and
also repel infections and pests.

SEEDS


The majority of spices are seeds; think of cumin,
cardamom, mustard, and fenugreek, or less
obviously nutmeg, which is a seed kernel. It is little
wonder that plants frequently concentrate their
strongest-tasting defensive chemicals in seeds,
since these are the precious packets of new life that
will sprout into the next generation of plants.

FLOWERS


Many flowers are known for their attractive aromas,
which have evolved to entice insects into paying a
visit and pollinating the flower as they do so. Only
a few have strong enough appealing flavours to be
considered a spice, most famously saffron, whose
red strands are pollen-receiving female sex parts
(stigmas) of a crocus flower. Another notable flower
spice, it may be surprising to discover, is clove.

FRUITS


The seeds of flowering plants are contained in fruits.
Many have evolved to be sugar-rich so that they
make an appealing meal for animals, who thereby
distribute the seeds over a wide area. Numerous
spices are derived from fruits, including allspice,
sumac, vanilla, and chillies. Several “seed” spices
are technically fruits, including dill and ajwain.

Cross section of a clove
Cloves are rich in highly flavoured
oils, stored in oil glands just beneath
the surface of both the rounded top
of the bud and the “stalk”.

Oil glands
are more concentrated
in the round head
of a clove

“Stalk” comprises
the outer sepals
of the flower bud,
and also contains
oil glands

Round head
is made up of the
dried, unopened
petals of the bud

Flavour stores

The vast majority of flavour
compounds in spices are oil- rather
than water-soluble and are stored
within bubbles of oil. Spices are
structured to keep these oils locked
away, to be released only if the
plant is damaged or attacked by
infection. Once the bubbles rupture
and the oil is exposed to air, the
flavour compounds quickly
evaporate into gases.

Glands rupture when the outer
surface is damaged. In the kitchen
this happens through bruising,
grinding, and application of heat.
Flavour compounds in the released
oils evaporate as a fragrant gas.

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