The Denver Post

Peppercorn is king in spice blends

- By Bill St. John, Special to The Denver Post

At their heyday in global trade, peppercorn­s were the NFTS (nonfungibl­e tokens) of their time, in the way that some digital art roils our current economies. They were the oddest thing to be so outrageous­ly expensive just because someone said so.

When Alaric, the king of the Visigoths, laid sack to Rome in 410, he exacted a tribute from the Roman Senate of 5,000 pounds of gold, 30,000 pounds of silver, and 3,000 pounds of pepper, that dearest of spices. The Visigoths didn’t need that much pepper, for anything, except as a way to ensure Rome never again got uppity.

And so it went for centuries with peppercorn­s. These wee balls were mighty scepters. In 1550 Antwerp, their price was the barometer for business in all of Europe. They themselves made splendid business. In the late 16th century, 100 pounds of pepper cost 3 ducats out of port in Kolkata, 25 ducats wholesale in Lisbon and 80 ducats retail in Venice.

Peppercorn­s were the reason Christophe­r Columbus set off in a novel direction in search of them (he was after “India,” after all, pepper’s birthplace and perennial major source). From the 16th century on, pepper controlled the trade in spices and, hence, European colonizati­on and imperialis­m throughout the globe. After Columbus, peppercorn­s shaped the world’s political order, a world we yet live in today.

A look around any everyday American diner will illustrate that pepper plays no exalted role for us. Except that no kitchen in the Western world is without it and few are the meals we eat that do not include it. We need our peppercorn­s, just as we need their ever-present sibling, salt.

Going back millennia — for instance, to the time of Hippocrate­s in the 400s B.C. — pepper was more medicine than seasoning. Its volatile oil, piperine, increases the flows of

both saliva and gastric juices, hence it always was used as an aid in digestion and figures so today.

That pungent oil and various ancillary resins and esters are a potent draw on the senses of smell, taste and touch. (Their fire isn’t a taste; it’s a texture.)

When fermented and dried, the unripe, green seeds of the vine Piper nigrum wrinkle and blacken. Picked ripe and reddish, their skins and some pulp boiled off, the dried white inner seeds become white peppercorn­s. (We pickle or brine the green seeds, then dry them, and call them green peppercorn­s.)

Typically, red “peppercorn­s” are the seeds of another species of plant altogether, a member of the cashew family (mind that, you who are allergic to the fruits of the cashew tree). And Sichuan (sometimes Szechuan) “peppercorn­s,” with all their fire and brimstone, are seeds of the prickly ash tree.

We can call them “peppercorn­s” if we like. They’re NFTS, after all, historical­ly the most totally flexible member of our economic pantry.

The best flavors and aromas arrive when peppercorn­s are freshly ground (or used whole in wet cooking such as braises or stews). As a term, “freshly” is flexible, too. Of course, it means when we grind peppercorn­s over the food we will eat momentaril­y.

But it also serves to name some blends of peppercorn­s themselves, or in tandem with their savory sibling, salt, that we construct and use up within a short time. These are the recipes here.

Stovetop Salt and Pepper Seasoning Mix

Many chefs or restaurant cooks keep this blend in small bowls or ramekins near their stovetops and use it whenever “correct for seasoning” comes along toward the end of a recipe.

Ingredient­s

1 part black peppercorn­s

12 parts kosher salt (if using fine or

flake sea salt, then 8 parts)

Directions

Using a clean coffee or spice grinder, or a molcajete or mortar and pestle, grind or crush the peppercorn­s to your liking (best neither too coarse nor too fine). Mix in the salt and store in a glass container away from light and heat.

Transfer whatever amount fits into a small bowl or ramekin kept by the stovetop for use as seasoning. Pinch with your fingertips into cooking preparatio­ns.

Dalmatian Pepper Blend

This mix gets its name because it is equally black and white, somewhat like the coloring of the Dalmatian dog breed. To your liking, vary both the grind on the black pepper from cracked to coarse to fine and the size or type of grain of salt (coarse, shaved, kosher, fine sea salt). Makes 1 cup.

Ingredient­s K K

cup salt cup freshly ground black pepper

Directions

In a bowl, mix together well. The blend will keep for 2-3 months in a sealed glass jar, away from light and heat, but is best used within 2-3 weeks after the initial blending.

Tuxedo Pepper Blend

In this blend, like the coloring of a classic tuxedo, black pepper predominat­es, although white pepper makes a statement. Black pepper offers pungent fruit and a touch of musk; white pepper packs a punch of heat and a slight bitterness. Good wherever ground pepper fits in a dish, but always best used toward the end of cooking, not the beginning.

Ingredient­s

3 tablespoon­s black peppercorn­s 1 tablespoon white peppercorn­s

Direction

In a small bowl, mix the peppercorn­s well. Carefully pour into the hold of a pepper grinder and use.

Christmas Pepper Blend

As the name suggests, a blend of both green and red peppercorn­s, but useful in year- round cooking. The combined taste and aroma is fresher and fruitier than that of either white or black pepper alone. Excellent ground as a rub for pork tenderloin or, kept whole and tied up in a small packet of cheeseclot­h, inside a simmering stew or soup.

Ingredient­s

1 part green peppercorn­s 1 part red peppercorn­s

Directions

In a bowl, mix the peppercorn­s well so that the two colors are evenly distribute­d. Store in a glass jar away from heat and light and either grind to order or use whole in braises or other wet cooking.

Bill St. John can be reached at bsjpost@gmail.com.

 ?? Bill St. John, Special to The Denver Post ?? Clockwise from top left: Black and white peppercorn­s; red “peppercorn­s” (a seed from a member of the cashew family); green peppercorn­s; and, at center, Sichuan “peppercorn­s,” seeds from the prickly ash tree.
Bill St. John, Special to The Denver Post Clockwise from top left: Black and white peppercorn­s; red “peppercorn­s” (a seed from a member of the cashew family); green peppercorn­s; and, at center, Sichuan “peppercorn­s,” seeds from the prickly ash tree.
 ?? ??

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