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"HERB-SPICE" names and their synonyms

In this topic, I have collected the names of culinary spices, aromatic herbs, seasonings and others that we use in cooking.

Sometimes the same spice is called differently, and this introduces confusion, misunderstanding and leads to a loss of time looking for the names of herbs and spices.

List of the names of herbs and their synonyms ladies in alphabetical order.

I hope you figure it out yourself

If further information appears in the future, supplement the topic, and I or the Moderator will put them in the right place alphabetically.

I wish you success in mastering the names of spices and their synonyms!
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ADZINO-MOTO - see GLUTAMATE

ADJIKA

AZHGON (cumin, zira, iowan, karom, Coptic cumin, Indian cumin)

AGAR (AGAR-AGAR)

AIR (ir, irny root, gair, yaver, Tatar potion, sabernik, kalmus)

ANISE (ganus)

ANIS STAR - see BADIAN

ASAFOETIDA - Ferula smelly; The resin is smelly; Bad spirit; Damn feces; Asmargok; Hing; Ilan.

ASMARGOK - see ASAFETIS
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BASIL (Reagan) - (darlings, fragrant cornflowers, red cornflowers, reagan (azerbaijan.), Rayhon (Uzbek), rean (arm.).

BADIAN - also known as:
Star anise;
Chinese anise;
Indian anise;
Siberian anise;
Ship anise.

BARBERRY

MARIGOLD (cardobenedict, tagetes, Imeretian saffron, Mexican marigolds, winter tarragon))

WHITE ROOT - see GINGER

BOUQUETS GARNI European spice mixes (soup mixes)
- powdery "garni bouquets";
- French "bouquet garni";
- American, or Florida "garni bouquet";
- English "garni bouquet";
- German "bouquet garni".
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VANILLA

VANILLIN

VANILLA SUGAR

Tartaric acid - see WINE STONE SALT

WINE STONE SALT - also known as:
- cremortartar
- tartaric acid

FIG - see FIG

WEIJIN - see GLUTAMATE
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GALACTOPHIL

GALGANT (KALGAN) also known:
Galgan;
Alpinia;
Kalgan root;
Pharmacy root

Clove

GLUTAMATE (SODIUM GLUTAMINATE) - also known as:
- Weijin
- Mannagi
- Concentrate
- Ajino-moto, etc.

MUSTARD
- black mustard (real mustard, French mustard)
- Sarepta mustard (Russian mustard, gray mustard)
- white mustard (yellow mustard, english mustard)

AVENS (drugstore gravilat, city clove, comb, chastets, Benedict's herb, undergrowth, signpost)
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DONNIK blue (blue sweet clover, blue fenugreek, gunba, blue goat shamrock)

BAD SPIRIT - see ASAFETIS

SOUL (OREGANO) - (motherboard, ladanka, matserdushka, flea, zenovka, kara gynykh, zvirak, tashava)

Angelica (medicinal alarm clock, angelica, angelica, cowshed, sweet trunk)
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YELLOW ROOT - see turmeric
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ZARCHAVA - see turmeric
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ILAN - see ASAFETIS

GINGER (WHITE ROOT)

INDIAN ANIS - see BADIAN

Figs - also known as
- figs;
- fig;
- wine berries

HYSSOP (medicinal alarm clock, angelica, angelica, cowshed, sweet trunk)

Ichthiocolla - see KARLUK
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KALGAN - see GALGANT

KALUFER (kanufer, kanuper, saracen mint, balsamic mountain ash)

CAPERS

CAPSICUM - see RED PEPPER

CARLUK (FISH GLUE, STURGEON GLUE, ICHTIOCOLLA)

CURRY These are complex spices (mixtures) made up of several strictly defined components of various composition.
- Western European curry;
- Indian type curry (tender and hot);
- incomplete curry (hot and non-hot);
- full of good quality curry (hot and moderately hot);
- curry for fish dishes;

CARDAMOM

CHERVIL (chervil, kupyr, snack, zhurnitsa)
- Spanish chervil (perennial chervil, wild parsley, fragrant buten, spicy buten, incense)

CHINESE ANIS - see BADIAN

CHINESE MIXTURES (POWDERS) five spice powders (USYANMYAN)
- sweet wuxiangmian;
- acute wuxiangmian.

KMIN (timon, spicy cumin, cumin cumin, Roman cumin, Egyptian cumin, Volosh cumin)

COLURY (coluria gravilatoid, clove, clove root)

CONCENTRATE - see GLUTAMATE

SHIP ANIS - see BADIAN

CORIANDER (kishnets, kolyandra, colepdra, kinza, kyshnitsi, kinzi, klopovnik)

CINNAMON (BROWN TREE, BROWBERRY, WHITE CINNAMON, BROWN KIDNEYS, CASSIA, CASSIA LEAVES)
- Ceylon: synonym - cinnamon, noble cinnamon, real cinnamon,
- Chinese: synonym - aromatic cinnamon, Indian cinnamon, simple cinnamon, cassia, cassia canel.
- Malabar: synonym - cinnamon tree, brown cinnamon, tree cinnamon, cassia-vera.
- spicy (cinnamon).

CRESSES - (tsitsmat in the Caucasus)
- watercress (watercress, watercress, bruncress, key watercress, water horseradish, water walker)
- bitter watercress (spoon spoon, spoon grass, spoon horseradish, Arctic spoon spoon, baruha, sea salad, scurvy herb)
- meadow watercress (field mustard, core, smolyanka)
- garden watercress (watercress, peppercorn, horseradish, horseradish, pepper grass, kir salad)
- capuchin watercress (povert, Indian watercress, Spanish watercress, lettuce, nasturtium)

KREMORTARTAR - see WINE STONE SALT

KUMIN - ZIRA

TURMERIC also known as:
- long turmeric;
- yellow root;
- Haldi;
- zarchava;
- gurgemey;
- aromatic turmeric (Indian saffron);
- Tsedoari turmeric (citric root);
- round turmeric;
- turmeric

TURMERIC aromatic - see turmeric

TURMERIC long - see turmeric

TURMERIC Tsedoari see turmeric
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LIQUORICE (URAL MALTIC)

BAY LEAF

LEMON ACID

LEAF CARRY (plant leaf MURREI KENIGA)

Bulb onions
- tiered bow
- shallots (shrike, charlotte)
- leek
- onion
- chives
- manhir (aging bow)
- Altai onions (Siberian wild onions, stone onions, upland onions, sonchina, Kurai onions, Mongolian onions.)
- Pskem onion (piez-ansur, mountain onion)

LUBISTOK (pharmaceutical lovage, lovage, lovage, libistok, dawn, piper, fisty grass, love, zaborina)

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MARJORAM (mayran, majorin, rosemayran, garden oregano, sausage herb, vorstirohi)

MANNEGIE - see GLUTAMATE

MACIS - see nutmeg

MELISSA (lemon mint, honey, mother plant, swarm, bee, daddy grass)
- Turkish melissa (Moldavian snakehead, dragonhead, bruise)

JUNIPER (common juniper, juniper, yalovets, genevre, baccout, juniper)

MURREI KENIGA plant - see LEAF CURRY

MACE also known as:
- nutmeg;
- matsis;
- mec

NUTMEG - see MUSKAT COLOR

MES - see nutmeg

MINT (pepper and lemon balm)
peppermint (English mint, cold mint, chill)
- curly mint (German mint, curly mint, meadow mint, field mint, forest mint, water mint, and green mint)
- spicy mint or elsgoltia (comb chandra, spicy hyssop)
- apple mint (round-leaved mint, Egyptian mint, golden mint, wild balsam, confectionery mint)
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STURGEON GLUE - see KARLUK
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PAPRIKA (PEPERONI)

PARSNIP (field borsch, popovnik, tragus)

PEPERONI - see PAPRIKA

BLACK PEPPER
Malabar and Tellischer

WHITE PEPPER

KUBEBE PEPPER
Javanese pepper,
Kumukus,
Rinu

PEPPER long
- long pepper,
- spikelet pepper,
- javanese pepper,
- pipul,
- kavik.

African pepper
- Guinean,
- Ashantian,
- West African pepper,
- Lecluse pepper,
- "pimentoda workers".

PEPPER include several spices that have nothing to do with real peppers - plants of the pepper family:
- Jamaican pepper;
- Japanese pepper (huajie);
- guinea pepper (heavenly grain, malaguetta)

RED PEPPER (CAPSICUM) which includes:
- paprika (red, hot, hot, Mexican, Spanish, Turkish, Magyar, paprika, chilli);
- cayenne pepper (Indian, Brazilian).

CHILLI (a variety of cayenne pepper)

PEPPER
- small pepper,
- table pepper

PSEUDOFEDERS (xylopes)
false peppers, brazilians, kumba (Mauritanian pepper), Negro (Guinea) pepper.

PEPPERS
- Jamaican (allspice) - clove, ormush, English pepper, English spice, all-spice, quadruple-spice (katrapis), piment.
- Japanese (huajio) - pepper zantoxil, pepper, chuan-jiao, huajio.
- Paradise grain (malaguetta or guinea pepper) - - amomum, "guinea pepper", mallagweti pepper, - melegeta pepper, meleguet pepper, manigvette pepper.

PARSLEY

SAGEBRUSH
- common wormwood (Chernobyl, Chernobyl, simple wormwood)
- Roman wormwood (Alexandrian wormwood, Pontic wormwood, Black Sea wormwood, ponskip absinthe, white wormwood, unforged wormwood, narrow-leaved wormwood, small wormwood)
- wormwood paniculata (kurovnik, shoreline, bodrennik, chiliga)
- lemon wormwood (god tree)
- alpine wormwood

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ROSEMARY (sea dew)

RUTA

ISINGLASS - see KARLUK
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CELERY (lleserey, fragrant parsley)

SIBERIAN ANIS - see BADIAN

SMOKVA - see FIG

RESIN STICKY - see ASAFETIS

SODA
baking soda, sodium bicarbonate, sodium bicarbonate, and sodium carbonate

SALT (SALT)
sodium chloride or sodium chloride - NaCL

SURRITE (STUDENT MIX)
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TARKHUN - tarragon

THYME (thyme) - (thyme, fragrant thyme, thyme, incense, thyme)

CARAWAY (timon, common caraway)
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DILL garden (koper, tsap, crop (ukr.), shivit (uzbek.), sew (azerbaijan.), samit (armen.), kama (georg.), till (est.)

URAL MALD - see LICRICE

USYANMYAN - see CHINESE MIXES
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FENUGREK or fenugreek - (fenumgrek, fenigrec grass, greek hay, greek goat shamrock, greek nymph, cocked hat, camel grass)

FENNEL (pharmacy dill, volosh dill)

FERULA STINKING - see ASAFETIS

FIG - see FIG
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JALAPENO

HALDIE - see turmeric

Hariss seasoning

HING - see ASAFETIS

HORSERADISH
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ZEST - the outer, pigmented, etheric layer of the peel (crust) of the fruits of various citrus plants.
- orange peel;
- lemon zest;
- orange peel;
- tangerine zest;
- grapefruit zest.

QUOTAL ROOT - see turmeric
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SAVORY (garden savory, summer savory, cheber, chobr, sheber)
- winter savory (perennial savory, alpine savory, mountain savory)

THYME (creeping thyme, Bogorodskaya grass, lemon scent, hog pepper, muhopal, macerzhanka, zhadobnik)
Cherry (bear onion, wild onion, hanzeli (cargo) flask (victory onion, Siberian wild garlic) garlic (garlic, garlic herb, forest garlic)

CHERNUSHKA sowing (chernukha, black cumin, matzok, nigella, roman coriander)

GARLIC

FUCK KAL - see ASAFETIS
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FENUGREEK - Greek fenugreek, chaman

SAFFRON

SAGE
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TARRAGON - tarragon
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SPICE MIXTURES AND SEASONS OF THE WORLD

AUSTRALIA
Vegemite Is a brand name for a spicy dark brown paste made from brewer's yeast, salt, onion and celery, invented in 1923 by Dr. Cyril Callister, a biochemist, and has become the national seasoning of Australian and New Zealand cuisines in recent years. Vegemite is used as a kind of mustard substitute and is usually served with sausage, egg and flour dishes, which gives them a typical "Australian" taste; and sometimes it is added to soups or simply spread on sandwiches or toast with butter. Vegemite is today exported to many countries around the world
AMERICA
Dipteryx (tonka bean) - a tropical tree of the species Dipteryx odorata of the legume family, growing in the north of South America (Guyana, Orinoco River region).The name of the tree in most European languages ​​goes back to the word tonka from the Galibi language - the indigenous people of French Guinea. The egg-shaped pods of Dipteryx contain one sweet and fragrant seed - it is used as a substitute for vanilla, as well as for flavoring tobacco and confectionery. Cookbooks recommend adding this spice to pastries and sweets based on coconut, walnuts and poppy seeds. Tonka beans are sometimes used as a substitute for bitter almonds in countries where the sale of bitter almonds is prohibited or restricted by national laws. The industrial collection center for Dipteryx is Venezuela, from where the pods are exported mainly to the USA. Fried seeds of another species - Panamanian Dipteryx D. panamensis - are also used for food
AFRICA NORTH, TURKEY, MIDDLE EAST
Harissa - A North African spicy blend of crushed chili, cumin, garlic and coriander, diluted in olive oil to a thick paste and used as a seasoning for various dishes, such as Tunisian Breck patties. Often, a little broth is added to such a paste, which has become widespread in French cuisine, and is used as a sauce for various dishes, for example, Algerian and Tunisian couscous.
It is placed on the side of a plate to dip pieces of fried meat into it. This seasoning is added to soups and stews, as well as couscous sauces. It is sometimes spiced with peeled tomato puree or used as a sauce for kebabs. A mixture of natural yogurt and harissa is an excellent marinade for pork and chicken. RECIPE:
products for 0.5 cups:
12 pods of dried red chili
1 tbsp. l. coriander seed
2 tsp cumin seed
2 cloves of garlic
0.5 tsp salt
4-6 st. l. olive oil
Remove the petioles and some of the chili seeds, then soak the pods in warm water for 30 minutes, until they are soft.
Pan dry coriander and cumin seeds to enhance the flavor and grind them into powder.
Crush the garlic and salt, add the chili and grind the mixture until smooth.
Add the spices and gradually add oil, continuing to crush the seasoning until the sauce is smooth and has the consistency of mayonnaise.
Store in refrigerator for up to 3 weeks.

Ras el hanout Is a complex spice mixture widely used in Arab and North African cuisines (Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia) in soups and stews. Its classic version includes: ginger, anise, cinnamon, cloves, black pepper, cubeb pepper, cumin, coriander, cardamom, dried lavender or rose buds, nigella seeds, nutmeg, nutmeg, galangal, turmeric root and sometimes paprika. Other spices are often included, for example, Indian long pepper, and in the most exotic options even such a famous aphrodisiac as the Spanish fly. The name "ras el-khanut" literally means "shopkeeper" from Arabic - indeed, every shopkeeper that sells oriental spices and spice mixtures makes a mixture in his own way - it can contain up to 50 different ingredients. It is seasoned with Maghreb couscous, as well as meat or fish dishes cooked on a tajin clay hearth.
Tseer powder - consists of salted peanuts, a mixture of spices, salt and ground chili.
This simple spice is used with kebabs. First, the raw meat is dipped in butter and eggs and then in seasoning. A pinch of powder is sprinkled on the finished meat before serving.

Barakhat - a burning fragrant mixture of spices and spices used in many countries of the Persian Gulf and North Africa (Libya, Tunisia, Syria, Algeria, Morocco, Lebanon, Jordan and Palestine) as a seasoning for meat and vegetables. There is no single recipe for cooking, it can include: nutmeg, black pepper, allspice, coriander, cumin, cloves, cinnamon, sweet and hot red peppers, cardamom, and sometimes even equal parts of crushed rosebuds and cinnamon. The main and indispensable ingredient in baharat is always black pepper, which gave the name to the whole spicy mixture.Before use, the mixture is usually quickly fried in vegetable oil and cooked with this seasoning couscous, lamb, fish, quince, chestnuts and apricots. In English-speaking countries, Baharat is sometimes sold under the name Middle East Spice.

Berbere - a classic Ethiopian spicy (very spicy) mixture, it contains garlic, red hot pepper, cardamom, coriander, shambhala, etc. There is no single recipe, since almost every Ethiopian family has a different mix. First, red chilli peppers are fried in a dry frying pan until it darkens, then long and black peppers, ginger, coriander seeds, Greek fenugreek and a little ajgon (ayovana) are added. The sweet tones so characteristic of the Arabian culinary style are achieved by the inclusion of cinnamon, cardamom, cloves and allspice in the mixture. After a few minutes of frying, all the spices are ground. Berberes are traditionally seasoned with mutton dishes; it is often prepared as a very pungent red paste, served with stews and added to stews and soups.
Galat daggd is a Tunisian spice blend that combines the sharp tones of pepper and heavenly grains with spicy sweet tones of cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves. The seasoning is in harmony with Tunisian stews, and the combination of hotness and sweet-spicy aroma is a wonderful example of the Arabian culinary style.

Dukka - a mixture of spices, widespread in Egyptian cuisine, which includes roasted nuts and seeds (each time the chef determines the combination). Dukka is based on hazelnuts or chickpeas, as well as pepper, coriander, thyme, cumin and sesame seeds (all coarsely ground and mixed). This seasoning is usually sprinkled with meat, vegetables, and also diluted with olive oil and used as a sauce in which bread and raw vegetables are dipped.
Zahtar (zahtar) - Jordanian mixture of crushed sesame seeds, sumach powder and thyme. Zakhtar is most often sprinkled with lamb before grilling on coals, seasoned with vegetables, and sometimes simply mixed with olive oil and spread on bread or pita bread. The seasoning is also common in Turkey, Syria, Israel and North Africa.

La hama (la hatna) Is an Arabic spice blend, most often associated with Morocco (especially the city of Tangier) and is used in soups and stews. It usually contains black pepper, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and turmeric. La Cama - consists of only 5 dry ground spices. It is added to soups and stews and goes especially well with lamb.

Loomi - popular in the Middle East (Iraq, Turkey), a seasoning made from lime fruits boiled in salted water and then sun-dried. This seasoning (whole fruits or powder ground from them) is used to impart citrus aroma and sour taste in dishes made from meat and beans. In Iran, rice is seasoned with lumi powder.

Mastic - the resin of the mastic tree of the Pistacia lentiscus species of the pistachio family, an important component of the Middle Eastern cuisine. Delicate resinous aroma of mastic gives a special piquancy to the famous Turkish ice cream dondurma kaymak. In Cyprus, where the best mastic is obtained, it is added to bread, as well as to marinade for meat. In Western countries, mastic can be found in specialized stores selling Cypriot and Middle Eastern products.

Offak - Tunisian spice mixture, it is "universally" seasoned with almost all dishes. It usually consists of ground coriander seeds, cumin, green anise, cinnamon, rosebuds and grated turmeric root.

Tarhana - Turkish dried mixture of flour, yogurt, tomato, red pepper, onion, salt and yeast, it is ground, sifted and fermented for 10 days in a cool dry place. At home, tarhana is usually prepared in advance in large quantities, and in winter they cook tarhana corbasi milk soup with tomato paste, butter and crushed garlic from it.

Tahini - common in the Middle East, a thick paste made from ground sesame seeds, it is added to many dishes, for example, to "felafel" or fried meat, in addition, it serves as the basis of many sauces. Tahini is well known in the cuisine of Israel (where it is called "tkhina"), Greece and Cyprus - Cypriot pies with tahini "tahino pita" are especially popular during Lent. Often olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, ground cumin seeds, red peppers, parsley are added to tahini and used as a gravy or simply served with pita or bread.

Hummus (hummus, humus, houmous) - widespread in the Middle East, Turkey, Greece and Cyprus, a thick yellow paste of mashed boiled chickpeas, seasoned with lemon juice, garlic, olive or sesame oil. Pasta is most often served with pita or used as a condiment for raw vegetables. One type of hummus, called hummus bi tahina, is made with the addition of tahini sesame paste.

GREECE, BALKANS
Greek sauce "Satsiki"
Looking for:
* natural sour yoghurt, without fruit and berry, vanilla and similar flavors and without sugar. If it is not possible to buy such yogurt, replace it with ordinary, but not very fatty sour cream, for example, sour cream with a fat content of 15% will do;
* fresh cucumbers;
* garlic;
* ground white (in extreme cases - black) pepper;
* salt.
I cook satsiki sauce like this. First, I remove excess liquid (whey) from the yogurt, for which I cover the colander with gauze in two layers and pour 0.5 liters of yogurt into it. The serum gradually seeps out, and in the gauze the mass remains denser than the original consistency. (It is good if you have a tall, conical colander at home. Filtration occurs faster in it.)
While the filtration is in progress, I peel the cucumbers and garlic and rub them on a fine grater. For garlic, you can use a garlic press, but a grater is preferable, the structure of the sauce will be more uniform.
After waiting for the end of filtration, I spread the settled mass from the gauze into a bowl, add grated cucumbers and garlic to it, salt and pepper to taste and mix everything thoroughly.
Satsiki is ready.
The sauce is thick enough, but if you want it thinner, add grated cucumbers. Their quantity can be used to adjust the consistency of the sauce.
Well, now about the approximate ratios of the components: I have already said about 0.5 liters of yogurt (sour cream), for this amount of dairy product you must have at least 200 g of cucumbers and a maximum of 4 cloves of garlic (lovers of garlic can add more, to taste).
The sauce is versatile, goes well with cold and hot dishes, with meat and fish.
Salamur - a complex spice mixture used for meat processing in the Balkan countries and Moldova. It usually contains: Jamaican pepper, coriander, cloves and bay leaves. The spice mixture is dissolved in salt water, and the meat is treated with a strong spicy brine before salting or smoking.
GEORGIA
Hmeli-suneli - Georgian mixture of dried spices. There are short and full compositions.
The first consists of equal parts basil, coriander (cilantro), marjoram and dill with the addition of small amounts of red pepper and saffron.
The complete composition, in addition to these components, includes fenugreek, celery, parsley, savory, mint and bay leaf.
Khmeli-suneli is used in kharcho, satsivi and other dishes of Georgian cuisine, in addition, it is one of the main components of adjika
INDIA
Baghar or tadka - a mixture of spices and flavors fried in hot oil - for Indian dishes.
Garam masala {Dagat masala) (from Ind. Dagat - "warm, hot" + masala - "spicy mixture") - a mixture of toasted and crushed spices, common in the cuisine of the cold regions of North India. Garam masala can contain almost all Indian spices, but usually it contains up to 12 ingredients: cumin, coriander seeds, black and allspice, Indian bay leaf (these spices form the basis of the taste), as well as in small quantities - cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg and cardamom.More modern versions also include hot red chili, fennel, saffron and nutmeg. All the components of garam masala are necessarily ground together, and such a mixture is always made by the chef himself immediately before preparing the dish, so it cannot be bought ready-made in a store. Indian chefs usually add garam masala at the very end of cooking, or simply sprinkle this mixture on the dish before serving. In addition, garam masala is almost always added to batter, in which pieces of vegetables or fruits are fried.
Masala (Garam Masala, Kashmir Masala, Chat Masala, Green Masala, Madras Masala)
Vindaloo - a complex burning mixture of fried hot spices common in the central and southwestern regions of India; it usually includes: mustard seed, cumin, ginger, black pepper, shambhala seeds, cloves, coriander seeds, red hot pepper and tamarind. From the spicy mixture, adding vinegar, they make hot pastes and sauces, and serve them. with meat, fish or rice. The same name is given to dishes seasoned with such a paste or sauce, for example, for making "fish vindaloo" - a fish slightly fried over high heat is stewed in wine vinegar with hot spices and garlic.
Colombo {colombo) - A common in Caribbean cuisine, a powdered spice mix of coriander, chili, cinnamon, nutmeg, saffron and garlic. Colombo stew is usually made with pork, chicken or fish with vegetables, with vegetables being stewed along with the main product, and rice and beans are served separately as a side dish.
Panch pkoron (literally: "five seeds") is a classic Bengali spice mix of equal parts cumin, fennel, shambhala, black mustard seeds and nigella seeds. Sometimes it also includes azhgon (sometimes instead of cumin) or black pepper. A mixture of unmilled spices is fried in vegetable oil (usually mustard oil) just before use. Panch-phoron is a traditional seasoning for vegetarian dishes in South India; in West Bengal, the state of Sikkim and in the cuisine of Bangladesh, it is used more often in meat dishes.
Sambar-go, or sambaar podi, a popular South Indian spice blend based on lentils; it is fried in a dry frying pan so that the mealy raw flavor disappears, and then mixed with fried spices: cumin, coriander, shambhala and black pepper, sometimes fried mustard seeds, fried chili and asafoetida are added. The mixture is then ground and seasoned with lentil or vegetable curries.
Chutney - traditional Indian spicy sweet and sour fruit and vegetable seasoning for meat; it is prepared with a wide variety of fruits, vegetables and spices (tomatoes, mangoes, raisins, apples, hot peppers, ginger, mint, sugar, vinegar, or lemon juice). Chutney is especially widespread in eastern India, where it is most often served with curries in small outlets or placed on a plate next to rice. The sweeter versions are simply spread over the bread.

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INDONESIA
Sambal (sambal) - a pasty seasoning common in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and South India for a wide variety of dishes. There are many versions of sambal, but two are the most famous: "sambal-ulek" and "sambal-bayak".
In any case, Sambal's main ingredient is the Indonesian red hot pepper Sambal, an Indonesian flavoring that is placed on the side of a plate like mustard, just to spice up the main course. Sambalom can also be called a hot chili sauce with a variety of additives such as meatballs, pieces of rvba, hard-boiled eggs or vegetables.
Sambal-ulek Prepare as follows: remove seeds from fresh red hot pepper, chop the pepper finely, pound in a mortar with salt and brown sugar and then lightly dilute with vinegar. Serve as a condiment or use as the recipe says.
Sambal-bayak - less common and more difficult to prepare, it additionally contains grated fruits of the Aleurites moluccana candle tree, garlic, kaffir lime leaves, onions, trassi shrimp paste, galangal, tamarind concentrate and coconut milk.
Sambal cup - the sauce can be served with the dish instead of the regular peanut sauce. It goes especially well with beef and chicken, as well as chicken fried in oil.
Sambal-blacan - made with fresh red chili pods with salt, blacan and lime. Served with rice dishes.
Bumbu - the general name of Indonesian mixtures of crushed fresh spices and spicy pastes prepared from them, the composition of the mixtures is selected specifically for a specific dish. Typically, such mixtures are made up of onions (this is the base), hot peppers, garlic, lemongrass, galanga root, ginger, kaffir lime leaves and Indonesian bay leaves, with all the spices pounded together by hand with a pestle. Sometimes dry spices are added to them, for example, coriander seeds and black pepper, and in Java and Bali - fried trassi shrimp paste.
Bumba is used either raw or fried for a few minutes and served as a snack. Any gravy will play quite differently if you add a couple of spoons of boom to it. Often vegetables, along with bumba, are simply boiled in a little water or in coconut milk, and the meat is rubbed with such a paste before frying.
Jankap (jangkap) is the general name for various mashed potatoes common in the cuisine of the Indonesian island of Bali. They are usually made from fresh rhizomes of ginger, galanga, or turmeric, often with onions, lemongrass, garlic, nuts, and chili peppers.
Junkap, for example, imparts surprising softness, flavor, and aroma to the roasted bebek betulu duck, a favorite dish of Western tourists.
In the rest of Indonesia, a similar culinary paste is called "bumbu".
Kaffir lime, or makrut (kaffir lime) - growing in Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Thailand) and Hawaii, a species of lime Citrus hystrix with small fruits covered with a dark green bumpy skin. Its dark green shiny leaflets doubled at the petiole with an unusual and very strong floral-citrus aroma is a very popular spice, especially in Thailand, where they are called bai makrut. The characteristic scent of kaffir lime is present in almost any Thai soup and curries.
Thais often combine these leaves with garlic, galangal, ginger, and plenty of chili. Kaffir lime leaves are also popular in western Cambodia, less so in Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia, where they are added to chicken and fish dishes. The highly acidic juice of the fruit of the kaffir lime has the same aroma as the leaves - it is also sometimes added to fish and poultry dishes in Malaysia and Thailand; less commonly used in Indonesia. Dried kaffir lime leaves and zest can be found in many countries (including the United States) from Asian food stores. The specific name is associated with the Greek hystrix (porcupine) and is explained by the large number of thorns on this plant.
Nioi) - common in Hawaii, the simplest table seasoning made from water-infused chili peppers with a small addition of salt.
Sereh - one of the Indonesian names for dried lemon sorghum powder

SPAIN.
Escabeche sauce - a spicy marinade, as a traditional means for preserving fish, poultry or game. It also goes well with fried fish.

ITALY
Battuto (literally: "beaten, beaten off") - Italian seasoning made from chopped vegetables and aromatic herbs. When shopping at a greengrocer, the hostess will not forget to ask for (aromatic herbs). Unfolding a bag or newspaper, she will find there a small onion, a carrot, a celery stalk, a bunch of parsley, and in the summer - and a bunch of basil. All these are the components of the buttuto, without which no Italian meat sauce is inconceivable.Vegetables and herbs are chopped very thinly with the mezzaluna (literally "crescent") - a sharp crescent-shaped cutter - in any Italian kitchen, this is the second most important piece of kitchen utensils (after a spaghetti pot).
For rabbit, game or chicken, rosemary, sage, garlic are added to the battuto;
For lamb - only rosemary and garlic;
For pork tenderloin, replace rosemary with lemon zest.
Gremolata (gremolata) - an Italian spicy mixture of chopped parsley, garlic and lemon zest, added to the stew at the very end of cooking to add spice and piquancy to the dish. Gremolata is used, for example, in osso buco a la Milanese and in Italian versions of Hungarian goulash.
Pizzaiola (pizzaiola) - a classic Neapolitan spice mixture of garlic, parsley and oregano, it goes well with veal or chicken fried over an open fire, as well as fish and fish dishes cooked in any way. The popular Italian tomato sauce salsa di pomodoro alia pizzaiola is made from this mixture.
Pesto (pesto)
Basil manifests its character most clearly in the famous, world-renowned Italian pesto sauce. According to the classic recipe, pesto is made from fresh basil, garlic, olive oil, pine nuts (Italian pine) and grated parmesan (some modern versions also add parsley, coriander leaves or mint).
Basil, salt, garlic and nuts for the sauce must be pounded in a marble mortar with a marble pestle by hand (even the very name of the sauce, which looks like a Russian pestle, is associated with the Italian word pestare - “crush in a mortar”), and then add hot dry cheese (usually equal amounts of parmesan and pecorino) and extra virgin olive oil.
Pesto was born in Genoa, hence the Italian culinary term alia genoese (in Genoese) for all dishes served with this sauce. In Liguria, where every city prides itself on its own variation on a classic theme, pesto can be found in every home, in the most elegant restaurant and in the most seedy osteria. It goes best with "pasta" (pasta), boiled or grilled meat. In Italy, it can simply be placed on the table with fresh white bread.

CHINA
Wuxiangmain - a Chinese spice mixture, in equal parts, according to one version, cinnamon, dill, licorice root, cloves and star anise (star anise), and according to the other (more classic) - cinnamon, fennel seeds, cloves, star anise and pepper -huajio. The spicy-sweet aroma of this not too hot mixture gives a special flavor to dishes made from meat (especially pork), duck and desserts made from fruits and rice, and also goes well with shellfish. In American and European cuisines Wuxiangmian is called five-spice powder ("powder of five flavors").

THAILAND
Malay Chicken Pasta - scalding paste made from freshly grated spices is stored in the refrigerator for a short time, you can also freeze it in the freezer.
Thai red curry paste (krueng gaeng fed) goes well with meat, poultry and vegetable dishes. It is made from grated fresh spices, stored in the refrigerator for a short time, you can also freeze it in the freezer.
Green curry paste (Gaeng Khiev Ven) - goes well with meat, poultry and vegetable dishes. It is made from grated fresh spices, stored in the refrigerator for a short time, you can also freeze it in the freezer.
Tai-nam-prick sauce Is the most famous of all Thai sauces. It can be served separately, added to boiled rice, or served as a sauce for raw or blanched vegetables. The sauce contains: dried shrimp, garlic, red chili, cilantro, lemon juice, etc.
Curry paste mousse-sa-man - the base is fresh red chili.
Siamese or Thai mix (thai powder) is one of the most famous low-burning mixtures, the methods of its preparation originated and developed in Thailand, Cambodia, Burma and other countries of Indochina.The Siamese mixture contains 10 spices: the main one is shallots fried in vegetable oil (its content exceeds the rest by 10 times), as well as garlic (powder), fennel, anise, star anise, turmeric, nutmeg, black and red pepper, parsley (leaves or seeds, powdered), and cardamom. The Siamese blend has a pleasant, distinctive odor and aromas best in rice, meat and potato dishes; it is often added to dough.

TEXAS-MEXICAN CUISINE (TECH. FUR.)

Pico de gallo (Spanish for "cock's beak") - a very hot spicy Mexican condiment made from chopped oranges, fresh tomatoes, cucumbers, fresh chili peppers (usually jalapenos), onions, jicama (Mexican potatoes), green coriander leaves, cumin, salt and lime juice ... This condiment, which is widespread in Mexican-Texan cuisine today, is so named because it was taken from the bowl with the thumb and forefinger, a gesture similar to a cock's beak.
CZECH REPUBLIC, HUNGARY
Vegeta Is a trade mark of a spicy seasoning widespread in Eastern Europe (Slovakia, Czech Republic, Hungary), it is produced in a variety of versions and is intended for soups, sauces, gravies and meat dishes. In addition to herbs and vegetables, it usually contains salt and monosodium glutamate, a substance that has the ability to enhance the taste of dishes. Vegeta bags usually indicate its purpose and features, for example: Vegeta with red pepper, Vegeta with curry, Vegeta for goulash, etc.

ORIENTAL SPICE MIXTURES

Along with individual spices, complex spices (mixtures) are used in cooking, which are made up in advance from a strictly defined number of components, combined in strictly constant proportions.
Knowing the basic, most common mixtures and understanding the principles of their preparation, you can modify their composition, adapting them both to your individual tastes and to the available products, to individual dishes.

Curry mix
Curry is currently the most common spice mixture in the world. Gradually, mixtures of curries of various compositions appeared, usually consisting of 7-12 spices, and sometimes even 20-24 spices (the so-called full curries). But in any curry composition there must be 4 main components, albeit in different quantities.
1) curry leaf (leaf of the Murray Koenig plant); if it cannot be obtained, it is replaced by fenugreek (5-10% of the mixture);
2) powder of turmeric roots (20-30% of the mixture);
coriander (20-50% of the mixture);
red pepper, most often cayenne (1-6%).
Together, these 4 main ingredients make up 36-96% of the curry powder, and the rest (auxiliary) ingredients make up a total of 4-64%.
Below are a few well-known standard home-use curry mixes. You can prepare them yourself or buy industrial-made mixtures (powders). The content of the components in the following standard curry powders is stated in grams per 100 g of mixture.
Standard Indian curries have a wide range of uses and are not only used in fish dishes.

Admin
FRANCE
Garni bouquet. - a classic French mixture of herbs, which is added to the dish during cooking. A small bouquet of garni includes: bay leaf, parsley, celery, caraway and pepper; large additionally include tarragon, basil, thyme, marjoram and rosemary; in the south of France, orange peel is sometimes added.
There is and the simplest option: 1 bay leaf, a sprig of thyme and 3 stalks of parsley. A set of herbs is tied with a thread or placed in a gauze bag, dipped in broth for five minutes before removing it from the heat, and then removed.

In the old days, there was a variety of garni bouquet, the so-called paquet (package), which included an additional slice of bacon.In the work of Pierre de Lune, published in 1656, "A New Chef, where he talks about the true ability to cook all kinds of meat, game, poultry, fish ...", the author lists the products necessary for cooks, among them he mentions paquet - "a slice of bacon, chives, a little thyme, two carnations, chervil, parsley, all tied with a string; for fasting days you can not put lard. "

The British this spicy mixture is called herb bundle, although in most countries its original French name is adopted.
Quatre Epis, or "four spices" (quatre epices) - a ready-made compound seasoning common in French cooking made of ground cinnamon (or ginger is a classic), nutmeg, cloves and pepper - more often white, although black is also suitable; sometimes allspice is added to it. The famous culinary dictionary "Larouse Gastronomique" advises to grind and mix 125 g of white pepper, 10 g of cloves, 30 g of dried ginger root and 35 g of nutmeg for its preparation. Born in the quirky Baroque era, this spicy concoction is sold in French shops, but true gourmets prefer to make their own. This mixture is used to season vegetable and meat soups and dishes subjected to prolonged heat treatment.
Matignon - a mixture of diced ham or bacon (1 part), carrots (2 parts), onions (1 part), celery (1 part) and leeks (1 part), accepted in French cuisine; sometimes mushrooms are added (1 part). Matignon, like mirpois, is usually used as a dressing for sauces, broths and stews.
Mesclun - ready-made salad mix made from fresh young greens, in the West it is often sold in packages in large supermarkets or specialized stores; its other names: salad mix and gourmet salad mix. This mixture usually includes: rocket salad, dandelion leaves, curly endive, sorrel, etc. Dressing such a delicate salad is best with the simplest and lightest sauce made from high-quality olive oil and a drop of vinegar so as not to drown out the natural taste and aroma of greens.
Mignonette - in the old days in France, this was the name of a small cloth bag, it was filled with peppercorns and cloves and used to flavor soups and stews. Today, the term poivre mignonnette refers to coarsely ground peppercorns (more often a mixture of black and white pepper), this seasoning is used, for example, to prepare pepper steak (steak au poivre). Multilingual Americans refer to this concoction as mignonette pepper.
Mirepoix - a mixture of chopped onions, garlic, carrots and celery, fried in butter; sometimes ham or bacon is added to it. In French cuisine, mirpois is used as a dressing for broths, soups, sauces and stews, as well as stews with it various products, usually meat or fish. The origin of the name is most likely associated with a French duke who lived in the 19th century, or with the name of the charming town of Mirpois near Toulouse.
Persillade (from French persil - "parsley") - a French mixture of chopped parsley and garlic, usually added at the very end of cooking.
Dishes with such a mixture in international cuisine are sometimes referred to by the general term a la persillade, or persille, for example: moutton persille - "Persian lamb".
Sachet {sachet) - in cooking, this is the name for a bag of aromatic herbs and spices, dipped for a while in soup or broth for flavoring. (In everyday life, this is the name of an aromatic pillow filled with a mixture of solid fragrant substances; it is placed in linen to impart a pleasant smell or to repel moths; as well as a small cloth bag decorated with embroidery for storing handkerchiefs, combs, etc.).
Herbs of Provence (herbes de Provence) - South French mixture of dry herbs that has entered the world culinary arts. Typically this mixture includes: basil, fennel seeds, lavender flowers, marjoram, rosemary, sage, savory, and thyme. Herbs of Provence are used in many cuisines of the world as a seasoning for meat, poultry and vegetables.
Fin-erb, or thin herbs (fines herbes) is a mixture of fresh, finely chopped herbs widespread in classic French cuisine. The traditional version includes: tarragon, parsley, chervil and chives, sometimes blackhead, savory and watercress are added to it. The mixture can also be made from dried herbs, but at the same time it loses its unique taste and aroma. It is used as a seasoning in chicken and fish dishes, as well as in omelets and soups, and it is added only at the very end of cooking and is not removed before serving (unlike, for example, a garni bouquet). An omelet with fin-erb, asparagus and goat cheese, decorated with chives, can become the centerpiece of any festive table

These mixtures are composed of powder, and they are usually intended for long-term storage, for the winter. They are used as follows: one teaspoon of the mixture is put on a saucepan of soup (per 4 servings) immediately 2-3 minutes before readiness, and at the same time about 1 teaspoon of finely chopped fresh garlic is added to the soup and the soup, after turning off the heat, is given stand for 3-4 minutes to infuse.
However, various national compositions of "garni bouquets" of fresh or dry whole (unmilled) spices are more common, which are dipped into the soup either on a string or in a special gauze bag 5 minutes before being cooked, and then removed before serving the soup. Below are the various garni bouquets (based on four servings).

French:
1. Parsley - 1 root and 1. sheet.
2. Bay leaves - 4 pieces.
3. Chervil - 2 leaves.
4. Savory - 2 branches.
5. Dill - 3 branches.
6. Garlic - 4 cloves.
7. Black pepper - 5 peas.
8. Saffron - 1 stamen.

English (dry):
1. Parsley - 2 parts.
2. Marjoram - 2 parts.
3. Thyme - 2 parts.
4. Basil - 1 part.
5. Lemon zest - 1 part.
6. Fennel - 0.5 parts.

German (dry):
1. Dill - 2 parts.
2. Coriander - 0.5 parts.
3. Parsley - 2 parts (finely cut roots and leaves).
4. Marjoram - 1 part.
5. Savory - 1 part.

American, or Florida (from fresh herbs):
1. Green onions - 2 pieces.
2. Parsley - 2 branches.
3. Marjoram - 1 sprig.
4. Thyme - 1 branch.
5. Rosemary - 1 shoot.
6. Red pepper - 2 pods.
7. Muscat blossom - 1 leaf.
8. Black pepper - 4 grains.
9. Cloves - 3 pcs. (bud)

Mix for boiled, stewed fish and minced fish:
1. Bulb onions (spicy varieties) - 4 parts.
2. Parsley - 1 part.
3. Dill - 1 part.
4. Black pepper - 0.5 parts.
5. Cardamom - 0.5 parts.
6. Nutmeg - 0.5 parts.
7. Anise - 0.5 parts.
8. Fennel - 0.5 parts.

Chicken mixture (for chicken broth, seasoning boiled and stewed chicken, chicken, turkey):
1. Savory - 4 teaspoons.
2. Basil - 2 teaspoons.
3. Garlic - 4 cloves.
4. Red pepper - 1/2 teaspoon.
5. Black pepper - 4 grains.
6. Marjoram - 1/2 teaspoon.

Pea mix (for peas, legumes, beans and lentil dishes and side dishes):
1. Garlic - 1 head.
2. Savory - 2 teaspoons.
3. Coriander - 1/2 teaspoon.
4. Red pepper - 1 teaspoon.
5. Dill - 3 teaspoons.
6. Mint - 1 teaspoon.
7. Laurel powder - on the tip of a knife.

Rice mixture (for savory dishes):
1. Onion - 1 head.
2. Garlic - 3 cloves.
3. Dill - 2 teaspoons.
4. Black pepper - 4 grains.
5. Red pepper - 1/2 teaspoon to taste.
Salt is added to this mixture to taste.

Rice mix (for sweet dishes):
1. Cinnamon - 2 teaspoons.
2. Star anise - 1 teaspoon.
3. Nutmeg - 0.25 teaspoon.
4. Cloves - 0.25 teaspoon (bud heads only).
5. Turmeric - 0.1 teaspoon.
Sugar is added to this mixture to taste.

Such mixtures are prepared in the indicated proportions, increased by any number of times, and each spice is ground into powder and then mixed with the rest.

The use of the resulting powder of the mixture is simple: take the amount required in each given case and introduce it into the corresponding dish 1 minute before readiness or immediately at the moment of readiness, after which it is allowed to stand for 2-3 minutes. Usually 1 teaspoon of any mixture is enough for 3-4 servings. Fresh onions and garlic are usually finely chopped; when using onion and garlic powder, 1 head is replaced with 1.5 teaspoons.

JAPAN.
Wasabi Is a Japanese horseradish variety. It is also known as "mountain marshmallow". It is grown near the rapid mountain streams.Peeling the root reveals a tender, apple-green flesh that is either grated or dried and ground into a powder. The powder is mashed by adding a little soy sauce or water.
Goma-shio (goma-shio, gomasio) - Japanese spice, a mixture of sea salt and toasted sesame seeds "goma". It is often made with one part rock salt and eight parts sesame seeds, roasted together and then finely ground. Replacing regular goma-sio table salt can help lower sodium levels in the diet, which is important for a number of therapeutic diets. The condiment can be purchased from Western health food stores or made by yourself. It does not store well, so you need to buy or cook it in small quantities.
Sansho - Japanese mild-burning seasoning made from aromatic leaves of the dental tree Zanthozylum sansho. Dried and crushed leaves with a delicate slightly mint flavor are most often added to soups and dishes made from noodles, seafood, and even green tea, and pickled leaves called "kinome" are used as a seasoning for rice. In Chinese cuisine, they use not leaves, but dried berries of this tree, called hu-ajie pepper, or Sichuan pepper, and the seasoning prepared from them is huajieian.
Shichimi togarashi - Japanese spice seasoning containing seven components: flakes of red hot pepper "togarashi", powder of fragrant leaves of the tooth tree "sansho", white sesame seeds, flakes of dried seaweed "nori", pieces of tangerine peel, hemp and poppy seeds. This seasoning, called seven spice seasoning by the Americans, has three grades of pungency - soft, medium and pungent. In Western Asian food stores, the condiment may be labeled as hichimi toragashi or ichimi toragashi.
dopleta
Thanks again Admin for a great topic! Energizer You are ours! Another addition is shambhala, aka Greek fenugreek, aka chaman. And in "T" you can add tarragon, which is also tarragon.
Pakat
Garam masala is a dry mixture of spices
Equal proportions:
Black peppercorns
Black cardmon seeds
Carnations and
Cinnamon sticks
Zira grains and
Coriander (cilantro) seed
Pinch of nutmeg
For osto lovers, add a couple of very hot dried red peppers

I made our amendments, remove these posts, they are no longer needed ...

Hivemind is power ...
dopleta
Oh, really, Admin, do you need it? We'll torture you! I also remembered: in the Caucasus, watercress is called tsitsmat. ...
Admin
Quote: dopleta

Oh, really, Admin, do you need it? We'll torture you! I also remembered: in the Caucasus, watercress is called tsitsmat. ...

Shcha, I will delete the topic if not necessary

And you will torture the Moderator of the section, her name is Stеrn
Pakat
Quote: Admin

Shcha, I will delete the topic if not necessary

I'll delete those ...

The topic is very necessary, people sometimes pass by unfamiliar names, and this is what they are looking for, only with a different name ...
Having arrived in Canada, I bought an English-Russian biological dictionary in order to buy products and spices that I am used to ...
Stern
Quote: Admin

And you will torture the Moderator of the section, her name is Stеrn

I'm not against! Bring down the info! I'll attach!
dopleta
Well, Stеrn, attach! I suggest adding:
purslane, he is - dandur;
johnjoli;
and chicory was undeservedly forgotten - both leaf and root.
Aunt Besya
The other day I approached an Uzbek with spices. I see Turmeric lies. and Saffron is written in brackets. I ask him, why did you combine completely different plants with one name ?? So he tried to prove to me for a whole hour that it was the same thing. They agreed that he gave up and said that in Russia they used to call turmeric saffron because of the similarity of color
Admin

CHERRYSHA. Synonyms: bear onion, wild onion, hanzeli (cargo).

Soda - (baking soda), sodium bicarbonate, sodium bicarbonate, and sodium carbonate.

FLASK. Synonyms: victorious onion, Siberian wild garlic

GARLIC. Synonyms: garlic, garlic herb, forest garlic

GARLIC MUSHROOM. Synonyms: garlic, musseron, onion mushroom, cartilage

PARSNIP. Synonyms: field borscht, popovnik, tragus

CELERY. Synonyms: lleserey, scented parsley

FENNEL. Synonyms: pharmacy dill, volosh dill

VELVETS (cardobenedict, tagetes), Imeretian saffron, Mexican marigolds,
Black mustard
Synonyms: real mustard, French mustard

Sarepta mustard.
Synonyms: Russian mustard, gray mustard

White mustard. Synonyms: yellow mustard, English mustard

KMIN.
Synonyms: timon, spicy cumin, cumin cumin, Roman cumin, Egyptian cumin, Volosh cumin.

COLURY.
Synonyms: kolyuria gravilatovid-naya, clove, clove root.
CRESSES
Watercress.
Synonyms: watercress, rezhuha, bruncress, key watercress, water horseradish, water walker.

Bitter watercress
Synonyms: spoon spoon, spoon grass, spoon horseradish, arctic spoon, baruha, sea salad, scurvy herb

Meadow watercress
Synonyms: field mustard, core, smolyanka

Garden watercress.
Synonyms: watercress, peppercorn, horseradish, horseradish, pepper grass, kir salad

Capuchin cress.
Synonyms: povert, Indian cress, Spanish watercress, lettuce, nasturtium

JUNIPER.
Synonyms: common juniper, juniper, yalovets, genevre, baccout, juniper

Dill garden
Synonyms: koper, tsap, krop (ukr.), Shivit (uzbek.), Sew (azerbaijan.), Samit (armen.), Kama (georg.), Till (est.).

FENUGREK or FENUGREK
Synonyms: fenumgrek, fenigrec grass, greek hay, greek goat shamrock, greek nymph, cocked hat, camel grass
Lyulek

Using natural vanilla

I'll write here how to use natural vanilla.

Girls ask a lot of questions in PM.
In order not to repeat it many times, I'd rather do it in public.
So:

1. Vanilla cannot be stored for a long time, as it dries out when exposed to air. Must be used within a month.
2. All the smell is concentrated in the innards of the vanilla (microscopic black grains inside the pod).

What you need and can do from it:
1. Cut along the pod, scrape off the dark pulp with a knife and you can use it with pleasure in dough, ice cream, desserts, etc.
1 pulp for 500 g of dough.
During heat treatment, part of the smell disappears, so it is preferable to use it for cold desserts: ice cream or cocktails.

2. The cut pod itself can be put in a jar of sugar and so make vanilla sugar.
Here is what Lyudmila (Toronto) wrote in her LiveJournal:

"you don't need to prepare vodka tinctures at home to give a complex aroma of natural vanilla. Other methods are used.

1) prepare vanilla sugar and knead biscuit or shortbread (and other) dough, streusel on it, prepare syrups for blotting and lipstick

recipe: for 2 kg of sugar, 3 vanilla pods, cut lengthwise and opened. Pour 1/4 of the sugar into the jar, add the pod, add another 1/4, add the pod, add 1/4 of the sugar, add the last vanilla pod and cover with the remaining sugar. Store at room temperature in a closed jar. After two days, pour the sugar out of the jar, mix and layer the sugar with the vanilla pods again. The vanilla sugar will be ready in 5 days and will remain as aromatic as possible for 6 months. Used vanilla pods, shriveled and shriveled in sugar, can be steeped in milk, cream or boiling water for dough, ice cream, custards, etc.

2) prepare vanilla powdered sugar, and sprinkle it on finished products, prepare vanilla glaze from it
3) vanilla pods are infused in boiling water or hot milk and then this water, milk is added to the dough if water or milk is contained in the recipe. The same goes for making vanilla frosting and fondant in water or milk.

4) scrape the seeds from the steamed vanilla pods and add them to the dough

5) Add a vanilla pod to a store-bought vanilla extract bottle for a more complex and authentic extra-potent vanilla extract.For a 2-ounce bottle of extract, half a vanilla pod, cut in half lengthwise, is sufficient. Scrape the vanilla seeds with a knife and dip into the extract along with the pod. The extract of increased strength will be ready after 5 days of storage at room T. Shelf life is 6 months. "

Unfortunately, I cannot give a link to the source, because one forum member shared this information with me. Thank you very much!
Nat_ka
I was somehow puzzled by the purchase GARAM MASALA (thanks to Stern),

Herbs-condiments, spice mixes and seasonings of the world

but in "our village" I did not find it. In the internet I came across a very, in my opinion, detailed advice on the preparation of this spice mixture. Here, I want to share. Website: 🔗
Garam masala:

* 4 tbsp. l. coriander seed
* 2 tbsp. l. Indian cumin
* 2 tbsp. l. black peppercorns
* 2 tsp cardamom seeds
* 2 tsp carnation
* 2 cinnamon sticks, 5 cm long

Fry each spice separately in a dry cast-iron pan, stirring occasionally, until the spice darkens slightly and begins to emit a characteristic odor. Typically, this procedure takes about 15 minutes. When all the spices are ready, mix them and grind them in an electric coffee grinder. Place the finished masala in a glass jar with a tight lid and store in a cool place. Garam masala, made from high quality spices and stored in an airtight container, retains its taste and aroma for several months.

Another garam masala recipe includes cardamom, cloves, and cinnamon in the same proportions as the previous recipe. After roasting and grinding these spices, add half of finely grated nutmeg to them.

Garam masala can be bought at the store, but its taste and aroma will be significantly inferior to what you can make yourself with freshly ground spices.
makabusha
Tell me, what is the name of the kind of mint that smells like candy-candies? .. I was given such a mint already in dried form, as much as I have smelled pepper or lemon balm, they are not like that. I just want to know the exact name to buy seeds.
izvarina.d
Quote: makabusha

Tell me, what is the name of the kind of mint that smells like candy-candies? .. I was given such a mint already in dried form, as much as I have smelled pepper or lemon balm, they are not like that. I just want to know the exact name to buy seeds.

makabusha , we are tight with such a mint. I buy Israeli - for cocktails and desserts (greens). And I looked for seeds and did not find them. I read the forums of Russian grass-growing farmers, so they also complained about the lack of "proper mint".
makabusha
Then I'll go ask about such a mint to the place where I was presented with it ... and I will already apply for a bush))))
Natalyushka
I don't understand - marjoram and oregano are the same thing - oregano?
variety
Quote: Admin
FENUGREK or fenugreek - (fenumgrek, fenigrec grass, greek hay, greek goat shamrock, greek nymph, cocked hat, camel grass)
Quote: Admin
SHAMBALA - Greek fenugreek, chaman
I read that fenugreek is a synonym for hay fenugreek (Greek fenugreek), and Shambhala is also a synonym for hay (Greek) fenugreek.
It turns out that Shambhala and Fenugreek are one and the same?
variety
AdminIf it's easy, add to your listing a story about a spicy mixture of Khmeli-suneli (Georgia) and Sharena-Sol (Bulgaria).
Well, just wonderful spices, they deserve a story about themselves!
For now, I'll write what I found about Khmeli-suneli:

"Georgian spice, in translation means" dry spice ".
Hmeli-suneli has a not very pungent taste and a very aromatic smell. Her color is greenish-yellow of various saturation shades.
This aromatic blend is ideal for meat and poultry dishes. The moderately pungent taste of hop-suneli very well complements meat soups, gravies and broths with aromatic notes. Fish dishes also give a very interesting flavor of hop-suneli. Khmeli-suneli is included in such famous national Caucasian dishes as kharcho or satsivi. This spicy concoction is also the basis for adjika.
This seasoning also goes well with vegetables, rice, pasta, potatoes, but hops-suneli is best combined with legumes.
In other world cuisines, suneli hops are often added to dishes made from pork, beef, poultry and game, seafood, vegetables, fish and rice - from snacks and soups to pilaf, stews and savory pastries. Georgian seasoning is also used in preparations: it is added to meat, vegetable and fish marinades.
The full composition of Khmeli-suneli includes such crushed dried components as basil, coriander, hot red pepper, bay leaf, celery, marjoram, hyssop, parsley, mint, dill, fenugreek (shambala, fenugreek), garden savory, saffron or Imeretian saffron (Marigold).
It is believed that in true hops-suneli, instead of hay fenugreek, blue fenugreek (utskho-suneli) is used.
All of these components are used in equal proportions. The exception is red pepper and saffron: pepper is added only from 1 to 2% of the entire mixture, and marigolds - even less, up to 0.1%. The choice of this or that version of this seasoning depends on the possibilities and personal taste preferences of the culinary specialist.
There is also an abbreviated 6-component version of hops-suneli. It consists of only basil, marjoram, hot red pepper, coriander, saffron and dill.
Dill, marjoram, basil and coriander are taken equally, and pepper and saffron are in proportions, as in a complete mixture. "

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