El Chef del Jazz

Cebolla en polvo

Ya es hora de que la cebolla en polvo empiece a recibir su apoyo. Añade una intensidad de sabor adicional gracias al tostado. Úsalo como un amplificador de guitarra para realzar el sabor de cualquier plato. Si cocinas a la manera de Jazz Chef, puedes consumir una gran cantidad de este producto, ¡así que compra la mejor bolsa de 4 onzas!

4 oz.

Descripción del producto

PROPÓSITO

¿QUÉ ES?

Onion powder is a go-to in your kitchen. If you knew how many boxed foods use it, you’d understand the cheap basis for the huge overcharges they make for “quick” foods. Toasted, dehydrated and ground into a powder, the savory flavor of onion powder intensifies at two-to-four times what a normal onion would provide.  Which is why it finds its way into so many foods. When you need more onion PUNCH, onion powder is the Rocky Balboa of your kitchen’s aromata!

EXPERIENCIA

It’s simply the flavor of onions, toasted and dried which intensifies the savory in them. A little mellow, no real pungency or sulfur flavors, it provides onion intensity with a bit less of the sweetness and removes the pulpy aspects of onions as they break down into liquids.

CULINARY GEOGRAPHY​

This onion powder is made from Indian onions, and is popular in quite literally every cuisine around the world.

USOS TRADICIONALES

Onion powder is in literally thousands of dishes.

IMPROVISATIONAL ‘RIFFS’

LA HISTORIA

Onion powder is made by mincing fresh sweet onions and then drying them out. The mince is then ground into a sandy powder.

Onions are a foundation food in most parts of the world because they grew wild in an amazing range of climates and growing conditions. Their ability to be stored, carried, even replanted where the bulb divided and made more, made them a go-to foodstuff for millennia. Onions reduced thirst, provided valuable nutrients, and added dimensions of flavor to meats, other vegetables, and grains.

Cultivated since ancient times, the earliest traces of the vegetable were found in Bronze Age pots from China from 5000 BCE. Aside from their taste, our ancestors probably liked the bulb’s durability and portability, and that it easily replants in a lot of different growing conditions.

Onions were mentioned in the tomb paintings in Egypt 3200 BCE, where they were used in ritual, and mummifications. The Greeks’ athletes ate pounds of them before the Olympic Games as a fortification for sport. The Roman armies, in their conquests carried onions into Central and Northern Europe, making them a staple of those lands. Evidence of them were even found in Pompeii, buried in volcanic ash.  Excavated homes were found to have gardens that still had bulb-shaped pockets that were made like plaster impressions in the ash.

ALIAS

    • bulb onion
    • common onion
    • cebolla
    • tropea lunga
    • ui — Afrikaans
    • qepë — Albanian
    • بصلة(basila) — Arabic
    • սոխ — Armenian
    • soğan — Azerbaijani
    • tipula — Basque
    • лук — Belarusian
    • পেঁয়াজ — Bengali
    • luk — Bosnian
    • лук — Bulgarian
    • ကြက်သွန်နီ — Burmese
    • ceba — Catalan
    • sibuyas — Cebuano
    • anyezi — Chichewa
    • 洋葱 — Chinese
    • luk — Croatian
    • cibule — Czech
    • løg — Danish
    • ui — Dutch
    • cepo — Esperanto
    • sibul — Estonian
    • sibuyas — Filipino
    • sipuli — Finnish
    • oignon — French
    • cebola — Galician
    • ხახვი — Georgian
    • Zwiebel — German
    • κρεμμύδι — Greek
    • ડુંગળી — Gujarati
    • zonyon — Haitian Creole
    • albasa — Hausa
    • בָּצָל — Hebrew
    • प्याज — Hindi
    • dos — Hmong
    • hagyma — Hungarian
    • Laukur — Icelandic
    • yabasị — Igbo
    • Bawang — Indonesian
    • oinniún — Irish
    • cipolla — Italian
    • 玉ねぎ — Japanese
    • trikatuka — Javanese
    • ಈರುಳ್ಳಿ — Kannada
    • пияз — Kazakh
    • គំនិត — Khmer
    • 양파(yangpa) — Korean
    • ຜັກບົ່ວ — Lao
    • sīpols — Latvian
    • svogūnas — Lithuanian
    • кромид — Macedonian
    • tongolo — Malagasy
    • bawang — Malay
    • ഉള്ളി — Malayalam
    • basla — Maltese
    • riki — Maori
    • कांदा — Marathi
    • Сонгино — Mongolian
    • प्याज — Nepali
    • løk — Norwegian
    • پیاز — Persian
    • cebula — Polish
    • cebola — Portuguese
    • ceapă — Romanian
    • лук(luk) — Russian
    • лук(luk) — Serbian
    • anyanese — Sesotho
    • ලූනු — Sinhala
    • Cibuľa — Slovak
    • čebula — Slovenian
    • basasha — Somali
    • cebolla — Spanish
    • kitunguu — Swahili
    • lök — Swedish
    • пиёз — Tajik
    • வெங்காயம் — Tamil
    • ఉల్లిపాయ — Telugu
    • หัวหอม — Thai
    • soğan — Turkish
    • цибуля — Ukrainian
    • پیاز — Urdu
    • piyoz — Uzbek
    • củ hành — Vietnamese
    • nionyn — Welsh
    • ציבעלע — Yiddish
    • Alubosa — Yoruba
    • u-anyanini — Zulu
Where to Find It
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