Spice mix

Blend of spices or herbs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spice mixes are blended spices or herbs. When a certain combination of herbs or spices is called for in a recipe, it is convenient to blend these ingredients beforehand. Blends such as chili powder, curry powder, herbes de Provence, garlic salt, and other seasoned salts are traditionally sold pre-made by grocers, and sometimes baking blends such as pumpkin pie spice are also available. These spice mixes are also easily made by the home cook for later use.

Whole spices used to create garam masala

Masala

Masala (derived from Sanskrit मषि (maṣi), to mash or powder/grind to powder)[1] is a term from the Indian subcontinent for a spice mix. A masala can be either a combination of dried (and usually dry-roasted) spices, or a paste (such as vindaloo masala) made from a mixture of spices and other ingredients—often garlic, ginger, onions, chilli paste and tomato. Masalas are used extensively in Indian cuisine to add spice and flavour,[2] most familiarly to Western cuisine in chicken tikka masala and chicken curry, or in masala chai.[3] Other South Asian cuisines including Bangladeshi, Nepalese, Pakistani and Sri Lankan, Southeast Asian cuisine such as Burmese, and the Caribbean regularly use spice mixes.[citation needed]

Notable spice mixes by region

A container of pumpkin pie spice
A bowl of khmeli suneli
Ingredients for a Gulf-style baharat

Americas

European

Middle East and Africa

East and Southeast Asian

  • Bumbu, several Indonesian blends
  • Five-spice powder, a blend of cassia (Chinese cinnamon), star anise, cloves, and two other spices, usually fennel seeds and Szechuan peppercorns
  • Thirteen-spice powder [zh] (十三香), eight more (not always fixed) ingredients mixed with Five-spice powder
  • Húng lìu, a Vietnamese blend
  • Shichimi, a mix of ground red chili pepper, Japanese pepper, roasted orange peel, black and white sesame seed, hemp seed, ground ginger and nori

South Asia

See also

References

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