El Chef del Jazz

Pimienta de Szechuan (en polvo)

Esta agradable especia, que no es en absoluto una pimienta ni un grano de pimienta, se utiliza en todo el mundo para obtener un gran sabor final con un pequeño cosquilleo alimonado. Se puede utilizar en polvo para aderezos y molida para cocinar, pero la mejor forma de utilizarla es entera y con un molinillo de especias.

1 oz. / 28g.

Descripción del producto

PROPÓSITO

¿QUÉ ES?

Szechuan pepper isn’t really a pepper or a peppercorn. It’s really a member of the citrus family, a dried rind of a small fruit. The seeds, shiny and black, are discarded. It is best applied at the end of cooking, as it breaks down with excess heat.  Here the powder version doesn’t seem to lose its punch as much as it would with a pepper pod.  Ground can be convenient, although you need coarse, also available, so you end up storing a lot more than just buying the whole husks and using a mortar and pestle or a spice mill.

EXPERIENCIA

Szechuan pepper has mildly pungent, lemon overtones with a mild, tingly numbness of the mouth called “málà” in Chinese, that is caused by a small amount of hydroxy alpha sanshool in the husks of the fruit.

BEST PAIRED WITH

  • Star anise
  • Ginger
  • Finishes of higher fat foods needing contrast

GEOGRAFÍA CULINARIA

Popular in Chinese, Nepalese, Indian, Indonesian, and Tibetan, cuisines, Szechuan pepper originates from China.

USOS TRADICIONALES

IMPROVISATIONAL ‘RIFFS’

LA HISTORIA

Szechuan pepper was widely traded throughout Asia and Indonesia both as a spice and a medicinal herb. It can be found in so many daily cuisines as a result. Popularized by the spicy Szechuan cooking craze in America in the 1980s, the fruit became a big seller on the spice racks of American stores that offered Asian foods.

The United States government banned Szechuan pepper from the late 1960’s because the fruit husks could potentially carry citrus canker bacteria and infect the American citrus crop. The ban was loosely adhered to, and was lifted in 2005 under the condition that all szechuan pepper imported be roasted at 70°C/158F to kill the bacteria.

ALIAS

  • Sichuan pepper
  • Chinese pepper
  • Chinese coriander
  • Thingye
  • Shanshō
  • Shān jiāo
  • Huā jiāo
  • Andaliman
  • Tuba
  • Aniseed pepper
  • Sprice pepper
  • Chinese prickly-ash
  • Fagara
  • Nepal pepper
  • Indonesian lemon pepper
Where to Find It
SpiceJungle.com

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