184 Spice Profiles
Black pepper is native to southern
India and has been cultivated and
traded for over 3,500 years. In the 4th
century bce, after Alexander the Great
had reached India, black pepper was
brought to Europe along newly
established trade routes. The highly
valued spice quickly became
commercially important, and Arab
traders established a monopoly on its
transport to Europe. By the Middle
Ages, black peppercorns had not only
become a culinary status symbol, but
were also accepted as currency. The
Portuguese explorer Vasco de Gama
set off to find and take control of the
source of this costly spice, and
discovered a sea route to southwest
India in 1498. For the next century
the Portuguese controlled the black
pepper trade. In the 17th century they
lost their monopoly to the Dutch, who
lost it to Britain in the 18th century,
when the British Empire took control
of the spice trade in the tropics.
Region of cultivation
Black pepper is native to the Malabar coast of
southwest India. It is now cultivated mainly
in Vietnam, but also in India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, and Brazil.
The plant
Peppercorns come
from a perennial tropical
climbing vine in
the pepper
family.
Whole black
Black peppercorns are dried with their
browned, aromatic outer layer intact.
Green pepper is less fiery and has more
abundant herbaceous flavours.
Whole white
The outer layer of white pepper is stripped
by bacterial fermentation, leaving it harsher,
less aromatic, and with dung-like nuances.
Vines are
pruned to 3–4m
(10–13ft) in
cultivation
Berries develop from
whitish green flowers
borne on spikes
BOTANICAL NAME
Piper nigrum
ALSO KNOWN AS
Peppercorn.
MAJOR FLAVOUR COMPOUND
Piperine.
PARTS USED
Dried berries, known as “peppercorns”.
METHOD OF CULTIVATION
The berries are harvested from vines at
different stages of maturity.
COMMERCIAL PREPARATION
Underripe berries are either blanched
and left to darken and dry for black
pepper, or picked earlier and preserved
without darkening for green pepper. Pink
pepper is picked after fully ripening.
NON-CULINARY USES
In traditional medicine as a digestive aid.
INDIA
MALAYSIA
INDONESIA
VIETNAM
BLACK PEPPER
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184-185_BlackPepper.indd 184 13/06/2018 16:24