Thursday 13 – Herbs and Spices
It’s been a while since I’ve written a Thursday 13, but here goes:
13 Herbs and Spices
What’s the difference between an herb and a spice?
It depends who you ask.
To a botanist, an herb is a plant lacking a permanent woody stem. To an herbalist, it is any plant used medicinally (which can include trees and fungi). To a cook, an herb is the above-ground part used in cooking, as opposed to the root or the seed (celery, celeriac, celery seed). A spice, therefore, to an herbalist is the same as an herb (cinnamon is an herb used medicinally). To a cook, though, a spice is the dried part of a plant, i.e. the seeds, roots, bark, flowers, fruits and rhizomes that also are used as a flavoring agent in food,(rhizomes are an underground, horizontal stem such as ginger). Herbs can be used in either a fresh or dried state; spices are almost always dried.
Here is my favorite place to learn about spices and cooking, as well as to purchase your supplies:
http://www.thespicehouse.com/spices/
Here is my favorite place to learn about medicinal herbs and techniques:
1. Cinnamon
I love cinnamon-sugar on toast. It makes me feel comforted, like good comfort food should. I also like to sprinkle it on the coffee grounds before I brew a pot of coffee. It makes the area smell nice and the coffee taste really good.
2. Salt
While it may not be the most healthful of spices, I have to say I love salt. I recently got introduced to different kinds – and colors! – of salts and have had fun taste-testing them.
3. Jane’s Krazy Mixed-Up Salt
No, this isn’t a hoity-toity blend. But my grandma had it in her kitchen and it’s tasty. I have had trouble finding it since then, but whenever I do I make sure I buy it. Turns out they have their own website:
http://www.janeskrazy.com/products.asp
4. Oregano
Other than its uses in cooking, once I came to Chicago I got turned on to the concept of oregano on pizza. Try it.
5. Garlic
Need I say more?
Well, okay, I do. In Jeanne Rose’s class, one of the projects is to make a garlic soup. You’re supposed to simmer like 20 cloves, right? Then it says, take the cloves out, press, and discard.
Apparently, in my world, discard means “eat.”
I figured, garlic broth good, garlic cloves AND broth, better.
…
Don’t do it.
Just, don’t.
6. Onion
Yum yum yum. Just brush yer fangs afterward, will ya?
7. Ginger
Yummy! I love this in tea. It’s fun to buy, since it looks like a mutated plant part that’s going to eat your refrigerator…
8. Lavender
It’s edible. I read a book on it, you can make candies, and put it in a marinade for lamb. I tried it.
It tastes like soap.
Oh well.
It’s good in tea, though.
9. Basil
One of my favorite spices. I put this in my garden every year. We have Genovese, Opal, Purple, Cinnamon, Lemon, all sorts of basils. It’s good stuff, Maynard!
10. Curry – not really one spice, but a blend
I didn’t know that it’s a blend. I like mild curry, particularly in egg salad. Raz al Hanout is really good in coffee with cocoa.
11. Vanilla
Sex on a plate. ‘Nuff said.
12. Anise
I love anise. Tea, in my chicken soup, all sorts of ways.
13. Thyme
This is a really good tea for when you have a cold. I love it!
A little cumin, some cayenne, and ginger, and you’ve got my spice cabinet.
Ginger, Basil, Oregano are my favorites. Oh and I love cloves with bay leaves and apples cooked with red cabbage. 🙂