Spice Module Flashcards

(48 cards)

1
Q

What are culinary herbs and spices?

A

Aromatic plants and their seeds used to flavour foods

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2
Q

What parts of the plant do herbs come from? Give examples

A

The leaves of plants (onions, parsley, mint)

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3
Q

What parts of plants can spices come from?

A

Seeds, roots, fruits, flowers, or bark (cumin, seeds, ginger root, cinnamon bark)

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4
Q

What is the difference between cilantro and coriander in Canada?

A

Cilantro is the leaves (herb)

Coriander is the seeds (spice)

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5
Q

How does dill differ as a herb verse a spice?

A

Dill leaves are the herb and dill seeds are the spice

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6
Q

Which cuisine uses the greatest variety of spices

A

Indian cuisine

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7
Q

Why does Indian cuisine use so many spices?

A

Many spices are native to the Indian subcontinent and historically traded

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8
Q

What is Garam masala and list common south Asian spices

A

Garam masala is a spice blend commonly used in Indian cooking

Common spices include ginger, garlic, turmeric, cumin, fenugreek, cardamom, mustard seed

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9
Q

What health related properties do many south Asian spices have?

A

Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antimicrobial properties

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10
Q

What is a curry?

A

A dish seasoned with a combination of spices and herbs often with oil

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11
Q

Where are Curry’s traditionally eaten and can they be vegetarian?

A

Traditionally eaten in South Asia, other parts of Asia, and the Caribbean

Yes, they can be vegetarian or contain animal protein

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12
Q

What is the difference between dry and wet curries?

A

Dry = no sauce

Wet = sauce made from yogurt, cream, coconut milk, or legume purée

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13
Q

What family does turmeric belong to and where is it commonly used?

A

Belongs to the ginger, family, and commonly used in curry spice blends & tarka recipes

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14
Q

What non-culinary use does turmeric have

A

Indian traditional medicine

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15
Q

What compound gives turmeric its health properties?

A

Curcumin

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16
Q

Why should lab studies on turmeric be interpreted cautiously?

A

They use extracts with much higher curcumin levels than typical diets

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17
Q

What sensory properties of foods are culturally valued?

A

Texture, taste, color, and smell

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18
Q

What factors shape an individuals palate?

A

Genetics, culture, personality traits, and food exposure overtime

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19
Q

How do children learn food preferences?

A

Repeated exposure within familiar and positive contexts

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20
Q

How are cultural food flavours transmitted before birth?

A

Through amniotic fluid and breastmilk

21
Q

What chemical compounds make cilantro taste distinctive and why do cilantro leaves taste different from the coriander seeds?

A

Aldehydes make it taste distinctive

Cilantro leaves and coriander seeds have different chemical compounds, making them taste distinctive

22
Q

What is cilantro called in the UK

A

Coriander or Chinese parsley

23
Q

Where did chilli peppers originate?

A

The new world (the America’s)

24
Q

What are two major types of chilli peppers?

A

Sweet (bell peppers), and hot peppers

25
Which term best describes chilli “heat”
Pungent
26
Define pungent food
Food with strong, sharp flavours that produce a heat or irritation sensation
27
Define piquant food
Moderately sharp flavours (onions)
28
Why is spicy an imprecise term?
It refers both to strong flavours and to heat, which makes it very vague
29
Where is capsaicin mainly found in chilli peppers?
The pith (that holds the seeds)
30
What type of sensation is chili “heat”
Chemesthetic (not taste)
31
What is chemesthehsis
Sensations of heat cooling or irritation caused by chemical activation of pain/touch receptors
32
Which receptor does capsaicin bind to & where are these receptors found?
TRPV1 pain receptors These are found in mouth, skin nose, eyes, digestive, tract, and anus
33
How is Chile heat measured?
Scoville heat units (SHU) or HPLC (laboratory measurement)
34
What does an SHU of 1000 mean
1 mL of pepper extract requires 1000 mL of sugar water to dilute the heat
35
Why does milk reduce chilli burn better than water?
Because capsaicin is lipophillic meaning it dissolves in fat not water. This explains when you eat something spicy water does not help much but fat containing foods like milk help reduce the burning.
36
What is capsaicin
Natural chemical compound in chilli peppers that makes them taste spicy and produce a burning sensation. It binds to TRPV1 receptors which sends pain and heat signals to the brain.
37
List physiological reasons people eat hot peppers
Enhance flavor, inhibit, pathogens, endorphin release, TRPV1 receptor desensitization
38
How can people overcome aversions to pungent foods?
Through repeated exposure, social prompting and social approval
39
What personality traits are associated with chilli eating in Canada?
Thrill seeking & benign maschosisim (enjoying harmless pain), this explains chilli eating contests
40
What is health Canada‘s recommended sodium intake per day?
1500mg/day Do not exceed 2300mg per day as intake above this level increase increases chronic disease risk
41
What is MSG chemically?
The sodium salt of glutamic acid
42
What taste does MSG enhance?
Umami
43
What happens to MSG in saliva?
It disassociates into sodium and glutamate ions
44
Does glutamic acid occur naturally in food?
Yes, meat, tomatoes, cheese, and mushrooms all have it
45
How is glutamic acid from MSG metabolized
The same way as good to make acid from food
46
Compare sodium content of MSG versus salt
MSG has 12% sodium and salt is 39% sodium
47
What is Chinese restaurant syndrome?
A set of symptoms that were reported after consuming very large doses of MSG without food (nausea, flushing, vomiting, headache, dizziness
48
Is MSG safe and would it exist in your body if you didn’t eat it?
Yes, it’s safe as it’s extensively studied by health Canada and other authorities and it would still exist in your body because your body naturally produces glutamic acid