T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3496.1 | one of my favorite spices! | TLE::DBANG::carroll | a woman full of fire | Mon Mar 30 1992 15:06 | 15 |
| I've found it at many big supermarkets, check Shaw's or Market Basket.
Probably the recipes you are using call for ground cardamom. You can
also get seeds, but they are big (bigger than your average orange seed)
and must be ground to be useful.
Cardamom is a sort of "sweet" spice - like vanilla, it adds some
sweetness and mellowness. But it is spicier than vanilla. It is
most often used in Indian foods, and it spicy-sweet foods like
puddings and carrot salad and stuff like that.
if you can't find it anywhere else, check an Indian or eastern foods
grocer, such as East-West foods in Nashua.
Diana
|
3496.2 | flowery | KAOFS::M_FETT | alias Mrs.Barney | Mon Mar 30 1992 15:25 | 8 |
| I would almost tend to say that the pods taste like biting into a
flower!
Health-food and "bin" stores usually have both ground or the whole
version.
(funny, I plan to make a big batch of curry tonight, and the recipe
calls for both kinds....)
Monica
|
3496.3 | Try Idylwilde Farm | BUOVAX::CHITALEY | | Mon Mar 30 1992 15:58 | 11 |
|
I have seen it in almost all supermarkets.
If you are in the Maynard area, Idylwilde Farm in Acton also carries it.
Buy a small quantity of ground. The flavor does lessen with age in the
ground variety. Pods keep the flavor for months. I like to peel
the pods and "blend" a few seeds (1/2 tsp or 1 tsp) in the mini
container of my Oster blender. That makes good fresh ground powder.
...Shubha
|
3496.4 | one of my favorites | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Mar 30 1992 16:06 | 6 |
| the seeds of this plant are very aromatic and make a lovely room deodorizer
for bathrooms, etc. They are also a wonderful breath freshener - simply
chew the dried seeds a few times and either expel or swallow. I love this
spice in milk-based desserts like custards and pastry creams...just a whisper
of cardomon is wonderful. This is also used very frequently in Indian
cuisine.
|
3496.5 | Used to be Pinches and Pounds | USCTR1::PSCOTT | | Mon Mar 30 1992 16:45 | 4 |
| I used to get this at Pinches and Pounds in Westboro...
Does anyone know...Are they gone for good, or have they moved again?
|
3496.6 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Mon Mar 30 1992 16:51 | 5 |
| Whole cardamom consists of a few black seeds in a white pod that is, as
previously mentioned, a bit larger than an orange pip. You don't use the
white pod part, just the seeds. Ground cardamom is ground cardamom seeds.
--PSW
|
3496.7 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | A Flounder in a Cloud | Mon Mar 30 1992 16:59 | 3 |
| I recall buying cardamom at Shaw's for $5+, and then seeing it
at Alexander's for $3+. What a difference in price!
|
3496.8 | versatile! delicious! | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Mon Mar 30 1992 17:44 | 31 |
| Mmmm, one of the most useful spices! Curiously, I've always called it
"cardamon" (with an "n"), but my dictionary says both are right (and
also "cardamum").
You can:
Grind up the seeds from one pod and add to curried rice.
Add ground seeds from a pod or two to puff pastry (or to yeast-based
puff pastry -- this is the basic Danish pastry dough).
It's great in marinades for chicken, fish, and meat. If I'm not
mistaken, it's the "strange flavor" in the Chinese dish "Strange
Flavored Chicken".
I plan to try making ice cream with it!
And how about in a hot drink?
In salad dressing?
In a dip recipe?
In stuffing?
Etc., etc.
By the way, it also comes in another slightly different and very
fragrant variety with a green pod (from some east asian country, I
forget which).
|
3496.9 | thanks! | BUSY::BLANCHARD | | Mon Mar 30 1992 17:59 | 6 |
| wow, this is great! I asked a lot of friends, but I guess none
of them cook! I checked Shaws and Victory in Hudson, I'll keep
looking!
thanks! :*)
|
3496.10 | Concord Spice & Grain | PINION::MCCONNELL | | Tue Mar 31 1992 13:43 | 16 |
| My favorite place to buy herbs and spices is the Concord Spice and
Grain store, 93 Thoreau St., Concord. They are open 7 days and if
they don't have it, it doesn't exist.
I have bought all my Indian spices there, including cardamon. They
have a great section of cook books, unusual kitchen items. Once, when
I went in there on a Saturday, they were giving out samples of some of
the unusual frozen dinners they sell.
The store is in Concord Center (that's the "center" - not where all the
other stores and banks are). If you are coming from Rte. 2, take Rte.
62 toward Concord. At the lights just before Concord Academy, take a
right, that is Thoreau St. (I know there is a way to get there
directly from Rte. 2 but this is the one that I know the best.)
I find it a fun spot just to check out occasionally.
|
3496.11 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Tue Mar 31 1992 16:07 | 4 |
| The "strange flavor" in Chinese "strange flavor chicken" is Sichuan Peppercorn,
not cardamom.
--PSW
|
3496.12 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Tue Mar 31 1992 17:42 | 9 |
| Given your familiarity with Asian cuisine (as demonstrated in this
conference), I guess you must be right. What made me think it was
cardamon was that we had it once at Hunan in Central Sq, and the flavor
of cardamon was fairly strong (at least I thought it was cardamon).
Also, we have sichuan peppercorns at home (use them occasionally), and
I didn't think they tasted that much different from other peppercorns.
Or at least, they don't taste much like cardamon. Is it possible that
the preparation at Hunan was a bit unorthodox?
|
3496.13 | On rice pudding, too | DEMON::GCLEF::COLELLA | Wicked good. | Tue Mar 31 1992 18:10 | 4 |
| I've had cardamom on rice pudding at a restaurant in Harvard
Square. I was skeptical when I ordered it, but it was delicious!
Cara
|
3496.14 | | HELIX::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Apr 01 1992 12:44 | 1 |
| If you keep a jug of water in the freeze, try adding a pod in it.
|
3496.15 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Apr 01 1992 14:05 | 11 |
| RE: .12
The things that I've used in cooking that are called "Sichuan peppercorns"
are red, wrinkled, round pods, about the size of a peppercorn, hollow, with
a small black seed. They don't smell or taste much like normal peppercorns
to me--they aren't hot, and they have a somewhat camphorlike aroma that
gives a numbing sensation on the tongue. I think this is the flavor that
I detect in strange-flavor chicken, but since I don't have a recipe for it,
you may be right--it could be cardamom.
--PSW
|
3496.16 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Wed Apr 01 1992 15:38 | 5 |
| Ah, okay. The stuff I have which is called "sichuan peppercorns"
doesn't match your description at all. They resemble black peppercorns,
only more wrinkled, and they taste something like pepper. I can't
remember where I got them, but I'll bet they're not the real thing.
|
3496.17 | Also known as ELAICHI | SUBPAC::SETTY | | Wed Apr 01 1992 17:02 | 5 |
| This is a seed or a dried fruit of a flowering plant belonging to the
ginger family. The seeds are enclosed in fibrous green or black pods.
The seeds are used in garam masala. Many Indians carry cardamom seeds
in small pill boxes to chew. It too, has a digestive effect.
|
3496.18 | Penderry's in Forth Worth | DPDMAI::SODERSTROM | Lady Godiva Ate Chocolates | Fri Apr 03 1992 18:34 | 6 |
| We have a spice store here in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area that does a
brisk mail order business. I don't have their phone number, but they are
under the 817 area code. They have about every spice imagineable in
the world. The name of the company is Penderry's. Ask them for their
catalog. Prices are competitive and spices are fresh!
|
3496.19 | Pinches & Pounds @ Searstown, Leominster | CSSE32::BELLETETE | Red diamond = my best friend! | Mon Apr 06 1992 16:20 | 5 |
| A Pinches and Pounds just recently opened in the Searstown Mall in
Leominster, MA.
Rachelle �
|
3496.20 | Cardamom in your coffee = Kafe em hell | TAVIS::JUAN | Juan-Carlos Kiel @ISO | Sun Sep 06 1992 06:14 | 14 |
| Here in Israel, most Arab/Oriental restaurants serve what we call as
"Turkish coffe" perfumed with Cardamom. The local for Cardamom is Hell,
so you get "Coffee with Hell" at the restaurant - or at the supermarket.
The coffee companies sell here the ground coffee with the Hell already
added to it, and it is prepared just like regular Turkish coffee. Try
this, after a heavy meal, and with baklava and similar oriental desserts.
I cannot give you any proportions, but I believe the amount of Cardamom
added to coffee is just enough to perfume the coffee, a pinch I might say.
Regards,
Juan-Carlos
|
3496.21 | Darjeeling Tea with Cardamom | TIMBER::HACHE | Nuptial Halfway House | Fri Sep 18 1992 13:19 | 10 |
| My roommate makes darjeeling tea with cardamom, here's what she does:
Pour enough water for four cups into a saucepan and add four teaspoons
of the tea leaves, four whole cloves, a finger of ginger (optional), a
cinnamon stick, and four GREEN cardamom pods. Do not boil. Heat
until just before boiling and turn down to simmer for five minutes.
Let it steep for five or ten minutes, strain and serve. Her favorite
way to is with heavy cream and sugar to taste.
dm
|