El Chef del Jazz

Granos del Paraíso (Pimiento Melegueta)

Misteriosos y exóticos, los granos del paraíso son una sutil maravilla, una fusión de granos de pimienta negra y cardamomo, con menos picor y más adecuados para platos que necesitan un pequeño toque de pimienta y un toque de color sin todo el descaro de la pimienta negra. Su tamaño y suavidad también las hacen ideales para introducirlas en platos en los que visualmente quedan mejor que la pimienta molida.

Descripción del producto

PROPÓSITO

¿QUÉ ES?

I want you to think of Melegueta (Grains of Paradise) as black pepper’s chill, richer cousin. It’s a close relative of common black pepper and cardamom, which are, interestingly, species in the ginger family.  If the cardamoms and the peppers got married, this would be their baby!  It’s great where you need a little peppery kick, or sometimes an attractive dark seed in, say a white rice, to put in pop and a little color variety without so much intensity.  They have good digestive properties which make them a plus in your cuisine.

EXPERIENCIA

Closer to cardamom, it has a sharper pepper flavor with a little nutty edge. Individually the seeds give you a snap of hot, pungent, and spicy but with a back-end of that fruity-cardamom flavor.

GEOGRAFÍA CULINARIA

From Guinea, Ghana, and southern Ethiopia, Grains of Paradise grow in swampy habitats, usually along Africa’s west coast.

USOS TRADICIONALES

IMPROVISATIONAL ‘RIFFS’

LA HISTORIA

Grains of Paradise have a romantic story. Carried from West Africa and Ethiopia across the Sahara desert, they found their way into the polycoctive cuisine of Sicily, and then Italy and ultimately, Europe. Grains of Paradise were the ONLY black pepper available to Europeans during the 14th and 15th centuries, and were wildly popular as a seasoning.

Stronger black peppers with more kick were a bigger sell, but came at a greater price. The name “melegueta” was introduced after 1469, when King Afonso V of Portugal granted the monopoly of trade to a Lisbon merchant who became the primary importer in Europe.

By the 15th century Portuguese trade to the Spice Islands and other sources of other, stronger black peppers brought the costs down. Grains of Paradise remained popular because they were cheap. When the cost dropped further, they were relegated largely to the manufacture of sausages and beer.

In West African folk medicine, grains of paradise are valued for their warming and digestive properties, and among the Efik people in Nigeria have been used for divination and ordeals determining guilt in trials. Grains of paradise were introduced to the Caribbean and Latin America, where they are still used in both the cuisine and, occasionally, religious voodoo rituals.

In a world of flavor nuance their subtlety is bringing them, and the dishes made with them, back to a 21st century discovering all of its nuanced tastes.

ALIAS

  • Melegueta pepper
  • Alligator pepper
  • Guinea pepper
  • Fom wisa
Where to Find It
SpiceJungle.com

Get top quality from our friends at SpiceJungle..

Reseñas

Aún no hay opiniones.

Sólo los clientes registrados que hayan comprado este producto pueden dejar una opinión.