5 Indian Spices That Are Great For French Cuisine: Chef Ashay Dhopatkar
By Chef Ashay Dhopatkar
Executive Chef at A Ta Maison, Private Members Club in New Delhi
To middle age Europe, the spicy East was exotic and alluring. The unique aromas and tastes of Indian spices fueled annexation contests between the French, the English and the Dutch to gain control of trade and politics in India. It will not be an exaggeration to say that spices were the reason that Europeans began colonizing parts of India and the Americas.
My experience and training in Western cuisine tells me that most of it relies on pairing ingredients that share similar flavour compounds. On the other hand, what makes Indian so flavorful is the practice of bringing together lots of different ingredients with completely different flavours.
The effects of the desire for aromatic materials that added extra flavour to otherwise bland European food (as well as helped cure and preserve the meats) are actually at the core of way trade is done even today!
In France, it is reported that taxes, ransoms, or customs dues were sometimes paid in spices. Guillaume Taillevent listed ginger, cinnamon, cardamom, and cloves (among others) as necessary in a respectable kitchen.
The French, with their delicately flavoured cuisine, have a lot to thank India for. Five spices that French cooking depends greatly on, top the list.
The Spice Box
Various professional and domestic kitchens in France are heady with the aromas of Indian spices and curries. A lot of my own dishes marry these global elements. I use a lot of nutmeg and cinnamon in my dishes.
These spices have been around for hundreds of years. With the start of colonisation and the advent of the spice trade, these spices found their way into the European market and eventually the French palate. Here are some spices that are adding flavour to modern European cuisine, and ones that I love experimenting with:
BƩchamel sauce, one of the 'mother sauces' of French cuisine cannot be made without nutmeg. Nutmeg is also used extensively in desserts and light savoury food. I always add small dash in spinach sautƩed in nutty butter which is an all time favourite side dish!
Executive Chef at A Ta Maison, Private Members Club in New Delhi
To middle age Europe, the spicy East was exotic and alluring. The unique aromas and tastes of Indian spices fueled annexation contests between the French, the English and the Dutch to gain control of trade and politics in India. It will not be an exaggeration to say that spices were the reason that Europeans began colonizing parts of India and the Americas.
My experience and training in Western cuisine tells me that most of it relies on pairing ingredients that share similar flavour compounds. On the other hand, what makes Indian so flavorful is the practice of bringing together lots of different ingredients with completely different flavours.
The effects of the desire for aromatic materials that added extra flavour to otherwise bland European food (as well as helped cure and preserve the meats) are actually at the core of way trade is done even today!
In France, it is reported that taxes, ransoms, or customs dues were sometimes paid in spices. Guillaume Taillevent listed ginger, cinnamon, cardamom, and cloves (among others) as necessary in a respectable kitchen.
The French, with their delicately flavoured cuisine, have a lot to thank India for. Five spices that French cooking depends greatly on, top the list.
The Spice Box
Various professional and domestic kitchens in France are heady with the aromas of Indian spices and curries. A lot of my own dishes marry these global elements. I use a lot of nutmeg and cinnamon in my dishes.
These spices have been around for hundreds of years. With the start of colonisation and the advent of the spice trade, these spices found their way into the European market and eventually the French palate. Here are some spices that are adding flavour to modern European cuisine, and ones that I love experimenting with:
- Star Anise
- Cinnamon
- Fresh green Peppercorns
- Nutmeg
BƩchamel sauce, one of the 'mother sauces' of French cuisine cannot be made without nutmeg. Nutmeg is also used extensively in desserts and light savoury food. I always add small dash in spinach sautƩed in nutty butter which is an all time favourite side dish!
- Cardamom
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