Celtnet Guide to Spices Beginning with 'R'


Spice Guide — 'R'



A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Welcome to the Celtnet Spice Guide. As this site has grown and many more recipes have been added it's become evident that a guide to the various herbs available to the cook is necessary. With spices becoming more commonly available and more exotic spices becoming available from all over the world it has become evident that some kind of guide or introduction to spices is necessary. These pages are an attempt at bringing all the various culinary spices together into one place so that you can see what's available and perhaps find something new to use in your own cooking. To use this Spice Guide simply click on the first letter of the herb name above or below. Alternativey why not just browse through the guide. All the spices given here, whether common or rare, can be obtained via your local supermarket (or more often via your local Asian supermarket) or via a specialist spice distributor.

marker button  Red Cardamom marker button  Red Ginger marker button  Red Mango
marker button  Red Pepper marker button  Red Peppercorns marker button  Resurrection Lily
marker button  Rhus spp marker button  Ricinodendron heudelotii marker button  Rocoto
marker button  Rosa damascena marker button  Rose Petals marker button  Rue Berries
marker button  Rue Fruit marker button  Rue Seeds marker button  Ruta graveolens
marker button  Rumara


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If you enjoyed this Spice Guide secton of the sebsite then you will be interested in my eBook on Cooking with Spices and Spice Recipes. This eBook is sold on behalf of my One Million People Campaign to help Liberian children forced to flee their homelands due to civil war gain an education. So, not only are you supporting a worthy cause but you're also gaining an invaluable cookery resource for yourself.





A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Example Spice Guide Entry

Below, you will find an example spice guide entry produced randomly from our database:

Spice Guide Entry For: Star Anise

This is the description page for Star Anise (llicium verum) and includes a description as well as an image, if available and a selection of recipes from this site that relates to the herb: Star Anise.

Star Anise

Star Anise is the star-shaped pericarp (the outer part of a fruit, excluding the seeds) of llicium verum, a small native evergreen tree of southwest China (also known as Chinese star anise, Indian anise, Badian anise [is is known as bājiǎo, 八角, literally 'eight-corners' in Mandarin). The fruit is bourne by a small evergreen tree that is believed to be native to southwestern China ad which is a member of the Schisandraceae family of flowering plants. The plant is grown in Southern China and Vietnam, but has been brought into cultivation and is no longer known in the wild state. The star-shaped fruit are harvested just before ripening (and thus still contain their seeds). The dried fruit resembles an eight-pointed star and has a flavour that closely resembles that of anise (hence the English and Chinese names). It forms on of the key components of Chinese five spice powder and is also one of the ingredients used to make the broth for the Vietnamese noodle soup called phở. Star anise is widely used in Chinese cuisine and it is used in some South Asia and Indonesia recipes (though to a lesser extent).

Star anise contains anethole as the main aromatic constituent of its essential oil (which is also the flavour ingredient of anise seed) and it is sometimes used in Western cooking as a cheaper alternative to anise (it can be distinguished from aniseed by the presence of traces of 1,4 cineol in the essnetial oil). Interestingly, star anise is now the main source of the chemical compound shikimic acid (extracted from the seeds), a primary ingredient used to create the anti-flu drug Tamiflu, which is regarded as the most promising drug to mitigate the severity of bird flu (H5N1); though there is evidence that some strains of bird flue have already developed resistance against this drug.

The archaic English name of badian anise, which is used in some historic recipes, is acutally derived from the Persian name of star anise, badiyan [بادیان], which may itself be a corruption of the Chinese, bājiǎo. Star anise is used in almost all the traditional cuisines of China, but elsewhere it is favoured only in the cookery of north Vinetnam, though it is occasionally used in Iranain, Pakistani and Northern Indian dishes. It is also added to the garam masala spice blend of the Kerala province of southern India.
Recipes Utilizing Star Anise

Chinese Five Spice
Pho Bo Soup
Colada Morada
Hakka Salt-baked Chicken
Roast Chicken Noodle Soup with Chopsuey Greens
Vietnamese Pork Noodle soup
Seychelles Fish Curry
Philippines Cassava Bread
Burdock Pickles
Millefeuille of Spice-Marinated Foie Gras, Confit of Figs and Madeira Aspic
Wild Plum Ketchup
Carob Chip Spice Biscuits
Massaman Curry Paste
Braised Beef with Turnips
Barbecued Baby Back Ribs
Masaman Beef Curry
Indonesian Catsup
Brown Sauce
Blackened Duck Legs
Barbecued Halibut with Oriental Sauce
Malay Chicken Kurma
Malaysian Kurma Powder
Spicy Sparerib Soup
Full-flavoured Fish Stock
Roast Turkey Noodle Soup with Chopsuey Greens
Baked Beans in Tomato Fondue
Tomato Ketchup
Piquant Tomato Ketchup
Chinese Chilli and Garlic Paste
Iced Ginseng Spice Tea
Fennel Syrup
Mulled Cider
Honan Braised Duck
Red Mole Sauce
Welsh Pickled Plums
Malaysian-style Stewed Pig's Trotter
Chicken Biriani
Lo Sui (Chinese Master Sauce)
Angels on Horseback with Prunes
Garlic Mustard in Lemon Sauce
Blackened Chicken Legs
Angelica Liqueur
Spicy Vegetable Medley
Vegetable-brined Turkey
Tomatillo Ketchup
Mauritian Chicken Biriani
Red-cooked Pork Belly




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Halloween Recipes - The Foods and History of Halloween

By gwydion | Published 2008-10-07 14:00:20 | 2008 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 35

Halloween has a 2000 year history, extending from the time of the Ancient Celts to the modern day. Learn how the Romans and Christians changed this ancient feast and how it found its way to the Americas. You will also get recipes for a Celtic stew and a pumpkin dish associated with Halloween.

Review of 'Leiths Cookery Bible'

By gwydion | Published 2008-04-15 18:54:39 | 2008 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 66

Prue Leiths' 'Leiths Cookery Bible' is one of those books that you never new you couldn't do without. It is the one cookery book that you need on your bookshelf (not that it will stay there very long). To find out why this book is so indispensible why not read the review now?

All Things You Need To Know About Electric Cookers

By Michel Gerard | Published 2011-11-15 06:35:50 | 2011 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 114

Home cooking is slowly developing into an outdated concept as men and women are just too occupied to worry about preparing their own meals.

The Traditional Cooking of England

By gwydion | Published 2008-06-22 13:58:47 | 2008 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 35

Much of what we know, historically, about English cookery originates from the grand houses, as only these recipes were written down in recipes. The food of the 'common man' had to rely on oral tradition to be transmitted through the ages. As a result we know far more about the cookery of the grand houses than the cookery of the common man. This all changed in the Victorian ear with the rise of the middle classes and the adoption of recipes, spices and cookery methods from elsewhere in the world.

Smoothies and their Origins

By gwydion | Published 2010-03-23 10:31:45 | 2010 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 35

A smoothie is typically a blend of fruit, fruit juices and ice blended until smooth, often with the addition of a banana to give a thicker consistency. Modern smoothies, however, contain frozen yoghurt as a base constituent. Here you will find out about the history of smoothies as well as seeing two classic smoothie recipes.

K Cups Offer Great Variety & Consistency

By Jenny Tompsona | Published 2011-11-30 19:43:09 | 2011 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 114

K cups can create very consistent and delicious coffee. Learn more about them.

How To Roast Coffee

By Ray Forrest | Published 2011-11-28 05:52:45 | 2011 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 115

In all actuality, coffee begins as a fruit that is bright red in appearance. However, you cannot simply make coffee directly from this fruit. As a matter of fact, there are several stages that this fruit goes through before it is transformed into coffee beans.

The Recipes of Wales — Modern and Traditional Foods

By gwydion | Published 2008-05-01 19:56:09 | 2008 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 35

The traditional recipes of Wales are what might be thought of as 'peasant food' the kind of recipes made by the poor who want to make the most out of what little food they had. This, in some respects, has left Wales with a blank culinary slate where some very exciting modern foods, bringing together influences from all over the world have been created. Here I give an example of a traditional Welsh dish and an example of a recipe from the new breed of Welsh cookery...

The World's Hottest Chilli Dish?

By gwydion | Published 2008-03-10 11:47:34 | 2008 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 35

Chilli recipes to blow your brains out... Here are three recipes from India and Africa, incorporating the world's hottest chillies. Each could claim itself to be... The world's hottest chilli dish...

Ice Creams and Sorbets – Freezing as a Cooking Technique

By gwydion | Published 2008-05-27 18:59:27 | 2008 Recipes and Cookery Articles |

Recipe Information: 35

Freezing is often ignored as a cookery technique, yet where would we be without those cold delights of ice creams, sorbets, sherbets and granaches? Here you will find recipes for classic ice cream and a classic sorbet. I hope that you will come to accept that chilling is also is also a valid and vital form of cookery.


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