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liuzhou

liuzhou

7. 孜然 (zī rán) – Cumin – Cuminum cyminum

 

562142194_cuminseeds.thumb.jpg.b84f98c512362584cd805c3d00047b0f.jpg

 

These, the seeds of a herbaceous plant, are probably China’s most used spice. Apart from being a key ingredient of some five-spice powders, it is used in a variety of other ways.

 

Perhaps most famous are the lamb (and other meat) kebabs (羊肉串 - yáng ròu chuàn) from China’s far west. These are available, grilled over charcoal burners, in roadside night markets in almost every city. Small pieces of fatty lamb (or mutton) are threaded on to sticks and grilled. As they cook, the vendor lavishly sprinkles them with cumin and chilli.

 

IMG_4956.thumb.jpg.c59eaba3860fac4f252ccb35737ff376.jpg

 

Another well known dish, available all over, is Hunan Cumin Beef (孜然牛肉 – zī rán niú ròu). This, I often make at home. It’s a simple dish of fried beef with cumin and copious amounts of green and red chillis. Not one for the chilli wimps.

 

1959566219_HunanCuminBeef.thumb.jpg.88dc405c6f568c96235a37fc5d5b9951.jpg

 

Cumin is sold here both as whole seeds and pre-ground. As always, I recommend buying the whole seeds, lightly roasting them in a dry wok immediately before using and grinding them yourself, either with a mortar and pestle, as I do, or in an electric grinder. The pre-ground stuff, if not already stale by the time you buy it, will lose its flavour very rapidly.

 

liuzhou

liuzhou

7. 孜然 (zī rán) – Cumin – Cuminum cyminum

 

562142194_cuminseeds.thumb.jpg.b84f98c512362584cd805c3d00047b0f.jpg

 

These, the seeds of a herbaceous plant, are probably China’s most used spice. Apart from being a key ingredient of five-spice powders, it is used in a variety of other ways.

 

Perhaps most famous are the lamb (and other meat) kebabs (羊肉串 - yáng ròu chuàn) from China’s far west. These are available, grilled over charcoal burners, in roadside night markets in almost every city. Small pieces of fatty lamb (or mutton) are threaded on to sticks and grilled. As they cook, the vendor lavishly sprinkles them with cumin and chilli.

 

IMG_4956.thumb.jpg.c59eaba3860fac4f252ccb35737ff376.jpg

 

Another well known dish, available all over, is Hunan Cumin Beef (孜然牛肉 – zī rán niú ròu). This, I often make at home. It’s a simple dish of fried beef with cumin and copious amounts of green and red chillis. Not one for the chilli wimps.

 

1959566219_HunanCuminBeef.thumb.jpg.88dc405c6f568c96235a37fc5d5b9951.jpg

 

Cumin is sold here both as whole seeds and pre-ground. As always, I recommend buying the whole seeds, lightly roasting them in a dry wok immediately before using and grinding them yourself, either with a mortar and pestle, as I do, or in an electric grinder. The pre-ground stuff, if not already stale by the time you buy it, will lose its flavour very rapidly.

 

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