…Other than salt and pepper

For me it’s cumin. It’s one of the few spices I buy in bulk and actually use up my supply.

In the winter it may lean towards cardamom thanks to copious amounts of chia.

  • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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    2 days ago

    I don’t know exactly what counts as spice ? I use a bit of shoyu (japanese name of fermented soy sauce) for broths and the like. Beer yeast for salads. A selection of chilis from Mada or Sénégal for some pleasant hotness. Curcuma grows everywhere around here so it’s also a staple. Same for ginger, and the wild variant “tsingiziou masera” -although I have been buying east african ginger recently because it’s cheaper.
    Green pepper seeds from northern Mada, they’re not hot at all, just pleasantly crunchy and savoury.
    When I get nostalgic of Provence I cook with garlic, olive oil and parsley (for seafood) or I use the wild basel that grows here during kashikazi (rainy season) : small leaves, strong taste, a little different from the mediterranean species.

      • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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        1 day ago

        I wish I could identify and use most plants like some of the elders (they’re not always elders of course) at least for culinary purposes. While they have conserved that empirical knowledge through traditional channels, others have studied on the mainland and now strive to reconnect it with modern, academic classification. An example https://journals.openedition.org/oceanindien/1770 This concerns medicinal uses, but there’s considerable overlap between food and medecine where plants are concerned.

    • Herding Llamas@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Sounds like some bomb food. I want to eat with you for a while. To help with what they are asking, the meaning of spice below. It sounds like you are using a lot of fresh good healthy food, but little of it is a really a spice. Maybe the turmeric or ginger half counts despite I assume that you are using it fresh. Or likely those green pepper seed.

      The rest as veggies, sauces, greens, roots and leaves.

      “A spice is a dried, aromatic, or pungent plant product— such as a seed, fruit, root, bark, or rhizome— used to flavor or season food and other products. Examples include pepper, nutmeg, ginger, and cinnamon.”

      • Hadriscus@jlai.lu
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        1 day ago

        If you’re ever in the indian ocean, please drop me a line, we can share good meals. Thanks for providing a better definition. I didn’t realize a spice had to be dried, and plant material. Beer yeast doesn’t count as a spice then I guess, as it is strictly speaking… a fungus.