Flavour Group | PENETRATING TERPENES | Grains of Selim 131
Cook briefly in fat before adding
to a dish, or add towards the end
of the frying time.
Add early when cooking in
watery dishes, to allow time for
flavours to infuse the dish.
Pleasantly fragrant molecules
(particularly phenolics) are deposited
by the rising smoke particles as they
wash over the dry fruit.
BLEND TO TRY
Use and adapt this classic blend
featuring grains of Selim.
Yaji p36
RELEASE
THE FLAVOUR
The main flavour compounds
of grains of Selim dissolve
and mix well in fats and
alcohol, but less so in
water-based liquids.
BLENDING SCIENCE
The unique flavour of grains of Selim is due to a powerful and unusual compound
called fenchone. You can also make interesting matches with its less dominating
flavour compounds, such as vanillin, germacrene, linalool, geraniol, and pinene.
FOOD PARTNERS
Drinks Use the ground spice to make
the Senegalese coffee drink café touba.
Vegetables Add the ground spice
to a vegetable curry of beans, tomatoes,
and courgettes; sprinkle the ground
spice over a spiced squash soup.
Fish Use the ground spice as a rub for
fish, such as cod, before grilling, baking,
or adding to a richly spiced gumbo.
Meat Make peppersoup, a West
African soup containing grains of Selim,
nutmeg, chilli, and assorted meats.
Rice Add a whole pod to pilaf or
biryani, or to Nigerian "one-pot" jollof rice.
complement sweet
hints with fruity,
tangy spices:
juniper is an
excellent sweet
match, sharing
pinene and geraniol
sumac brings
mouth-puckering
sweet-sour notes
liquorice contains
intensely sweet
glycyrrhizin and
shares cineole
team with other
spices that carry
this compound:
fennel brings a
strong liquorice taste
and accentuates pine
flavour
dill carries subtler,
anise-like flavours and
adds hints of citrus
enhance woody
notes with similar
compounds
nutmeg and
mace contain a
woody compound
called myristicin
add a fragrant
floral spice to
the mix:
coriander’s floral
flavours are sweet
and citrus infused
cardamom shares
linalool while
penetrating cineole
complements the
lingering camphor
notes
FENCHONE
bitter | penetrating |
camphorous
VANILLIN
sweet | fragrant |
creamy
GERMACRENE
woody | spicy |
sweet
LINALOOL AND
GERANIOL
floral | sweet |
herbal
Kitchen
creativity
Whole pods add a raw pepperiness to soups, porridges, stews, and sauces, while the
ground pods make excellent dry rubs for meat and fish. The whole pods are
sometimes tied in a muslin pouch so that they can be removed easily before serving.
Aroma-laden
fragments embed in
the skin of the pods
MAXIMIZE
THE SMOKINESS
Dried pods are smoked during drying to
give a musky, wood-smoke aroma. Most
of the smokiness is in the pods, so for the
fullest smoky flavour grind the whole
pods just before use.
GRAINS OF
SELIM
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