Sigue el video de abajo para ver cómo instalar nuestro sitio como una aplicación web en tu pantalla de inicio.
Nota: Esta función puede no estar disponible en algunos navegadores.
Go for Hungarian Paprika, it’s actually hot.Paprika has very mild spice, alright on eggs. Spicy paprika is better.
Olives are amazing. I could live off of toasted pita bread with kalamata olives, humus/baba ganoush, and pancetta.No wonder I dislike Greek food so much, hate anything with olives anyway.
Cream of Tartar. It’s sat in the rack for years, never once needed it. I’m sure it’s useful for something but I’ve yet to have a recipe calling for it.
My ex gf had that in her spice collection but she was into baking sweets. So it's useful if that's your thing, I've never used it myself.Cream of Tartar.
I have come across recipes calling for pretty much every spice people can name at some point but never fenugreek. I even had a bottle of it once (it came with a gifted spice rack).Fenugreek (dried pulverized seeds?). I've thrown it into rice and curries before, but it's not that satisfying. I don't remember why I bought it.
[Insert Beavis and Butthead laughter here]In the same way in Turkish cuisine fenugreek seed powder, called 'çemen', is used to make a paste with paprika powder and garlic to cover dried and cured beef in making pastirma/basturma. (Its name comes from the Turkish verb 'bastırmak', meaning 'to press').
Breakfast potatoes, also referred to as home fries, are a popular breakfast or brunch dish. They are typically diced potatoes that are parboiled and then pan-fried with vegetables like peppers and onions. Home fries are a way to differentiate between diced potatoes and French fries, which are usually sliced and fried.![]()
give dried green spices a grind in a mortar, it works for bringing back the flavors. They're exclusively good for soups, sauces, and other wet dishes. The only spices that really works as a dry rub are paprika, garlic and various peppers.The most useless herbs are some of the dried equivalents of fresh ones. Fresh parsley is delicious and underrated, but dried parsley is flavorless and adds nothing to a dish. Even for the aesthetics fresh parsley looks better.
My other contenders are dried cilantro, dried basil, dried epazote, and dried rosemary.
Star anise is always in five spice (some others can be swapped out or substituted). I'd recommend infusing oil with it and using it in soups/stews/sauces rather than trying to sprinkle it onto stuff, in most cases.It's good to sprinkle over certain Asian dishes ("five-spice" is better) in moderation. I could never see myself using a whole container at home in my lifetime.
I think it goes better with meat than black pepper does, it's got a duller tasteI'm always confused by White pepper. Does anyone use it for anything?
"Jajang" (Koreans trying to say "fried sauce" in Chinese) is mostly fermented wheat, the soybeans are primarily there so it doesn't just taste like thick disgusting slop (even though they make it taste exactly like that anyway).Not a spice. Whatever. That one black bean paste that's almost exclusively used for jajangmyeon(noodles covered in a black bean paste). Amazing noodle dish, but how the hell do I use the whole jar? I tried using it to make a lazy version of jajangmyeon. Still couldn't go through the stuff before it expired.
I can find uses for almost any spice, herb, or sauce by just making some instant ramen or rice. This? It's so single use it shouldn't be sold in anything but small containers.
I gotchu fam:The only thing I have used in this drawer is the apple pie spice flavor
Paprika - I also put this in stroganoff. Depending on the flavor, you could do a lot with it. Europeans will judge you.
Cinnamon - Do the cinnamon challenge while drunk.
Those are all great answers.Cloves - Put it in baked stuff. Wassail recipes usually use whole cloves, sometimes ground. You can then add grain alcohol to your wassail.
I don’t know the difference flavor wise but I’ve heard it can be used for aesthetics. Some people don’t like their mashed potatoes to have freckles, for exampleI'm always confused by White pepper. Does anyone use it for anything?
Most of the “pumpkin spice” spices. Besides cinnamon, and Cinnamon still counts, I very rarely have to use cloves, anise or nutmeg for anything in my regular culinary rotations.
And gumbo file. I know it has a function but I don’t make gumbo enough and don’t see a significant enough effect to justify buying it
Dried or fresh, what do I get from Marjoram that I don't get from any other herb?