Cumin
7.2


Details
Originally from the Middle East, cumin was either used for smoking or for flavouring food. It comes from the same family as parsley and is the fruit of the plant. Before it's fully ripened, it is cut and then hung up to dry for a few days, beaten like wheat so that the fruit falls off and then laid out to dry in the sun.
The bitter yet slightly hot flavour, and its particularly strong aroma make this distinctive spice stand out in all your dishes. Cumin will enhance chili con carne, sauerkraut, and shepherd's pie. It will enchant fresh orange fruit salad, and of course the ever traditional hummus.
Roast it then grind it to delight all your dishes !
More Information
Native country | SYRIE |
---|---|
Genus and botanical species | Cuminum cyminum |
Ingredients | cumin |
Allergen | Traces possibles de:gluten,moutarde/possible traces of:gluten,mustard |
TRACES EVENTUELLES D'ALLERGÈNES | céleri, sésame, moutarde, fruits à coques. |
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