186 Spice Profiles
BOTANICAL NAME
Zanthoxylum simulans
ALSO KNOWN AS
Chinese coriander, Chinese pepper,
mountain pepper, hua jiao, fagara.
MAJOR FLAVOUR COMPOUNDS
Sanshools.
PARTS USED
Fruit rinds (termed “peppercorns”), leaves.
METHOD OF CULTIVATION
Berry-sized fruits are picked in autumn
when red and mature.
COMMERCIAL PREPARATION
Fruits are sun-dried until they split open and
pounded to free the bitter seeds, which are
are discarded. The fruits are dried further.
NON-CULINARY USES
Used in Chinese herbal medicine as a
stimulant to promote digestion. Also used
as a diuretic and to treat rheumatism.
NEPAL
BHUTAN
CHINA
KOREA
MONGOLIA
SICHUAN PEPPER
Pungent | Citrusy | Floral
The plant
Sichuan pepper comes
from a shrub or small tree
in the citrus family.
Fruits are
small and
rust-red
Seeds in
the fruits
are black
and shiny
Leaves are
used as a
lemony spice
in Japan
Seeds are slightly
bitter but harmless,
and need not
be picked out
Powder
Pre-ground Sichuan
pepper is available to
buy, but is best
avoided as the flavours
quickly degrade.
Whole
The spice flavour comes from the
fruit’s dried husk, rather than
from the black seeds inside it.
Surface is
prickly, with
bits of stalk
attached
Region of cultivation
Sichuan pepper is native to the Sichuan
region of China. It is now cultivated
throughout China, Korea, Mongolia, Nepal,
and Bhutan.
Sichuan pepper has long featured
in the culture and cuisine of China.
More than 2,000 years ago, during
the Han Dynasty, it was reportedly
mixed into plaster to perfume the
walls of “pepper houses” – buildings
that housed the Emperor’s concubines
- to warm the rooms and perfume the
air. It has also been found in tombs in
northern China dating back to a similar
period. The pepper was used to spice
luxury foods and wines; Hanshan, an
8th century Chinese poet, described
lavish dishes of “roast duck tinctured
with Sichuan pepper and salt”. It was
also key in foods prepared as offerings
to the gods. Perhaps because the plant
bears many fruits and seeds, it was
adopted as a fertility symbol, and in
some rural areas of China today the
spice is still thrown over newlyweds,
like rice or confetti.
Spice story
186-187_Sichuan_pepper.indd 186 04/06/2018 15:49