Spices In The Round
Shot taken for Saturday Self Challenge 20/01/2023 --------
Herbs & Spices
I could have taken a shop name board as there is a nearby curry take-away called " Surrey Spice " , but that did not appeal . Instead I have just taken a shot of what spices I had to hand looking down from above . What I do not have which may have been more interesting to take a macro of would have been Saffron !! Pound for pound or gram for gram Saffron is more costly than Gold !!!
In fact it is the most expensive spice to buy and here are a few facts about Saffron ( with thanks to The Cornish Bird )
For most people Saffron is a captivating and expensive spice which conjures up images of mysterious distant lands but for hundreds of years to the Cornish it has been a more homely than exotic ingredient and seen throughout the land of Kernow in Saffron Buns and Saffron Loaf .
It is a story of much conjecture and hot debate as to when saffron first arrived in Cornwall. There are stories of Phoenician and Roman traders from more than 2000 years ago but the more likely answer is a little later than that. In the 14th century Cornwall had a healthy trade in tin with its Spanish neighbours, who in turn had trade routes across the globe, one theory is that saffron first arrived through them.
And this fantastic aromatic spice made its way into our Cornish cooking. Saffron buns and saffron cake are an integral part of any cakey tea (well they always have been in my house anyway!) just as much as clotted cream. And there is even some evidence that saffron was cultivated in a few select places in Cornwall for a while – there are records of saffron fields in Launcells near Bude, Fowey, Penryn, Feock and Gerrans.
Further evidence of saffron of this can be found in old place names. The Falmouth Packet newspaper recorded a dispute over a lease in Devoran, the plot was called Saffron Meadow had been leased in 1898 by Mr Robert Treneer Mitchell, who was reportedly using the field to grow flowers. Another plot known as Saffron Park is mentioned in deeds at Veryan, near Tregony.
Growing and harvesting saffron is what makes it the most expensive spice in the world, it is very labour intensive. Saffron is in fact the dried red stigma of the autumn flowering purple Crocus Sativus. Each flower has to be hand picked and the three delicate stigma removed. It takes roughly 200 flowers to produce just 1 gram of saffron. But the result is a versatile spice with a unique flavour.
The name saffron comes from the Arabic word za’faran meaning yellow which gives a clue to its other use as a dye. Saffron also has medicinal properties and known to have a similar narcotic effect to opium. During the 18th and 19th centuries it was used in various opioid preparations, such a laudanum, for pain relief.
Saffron went out of fashion in cooking in England but it continued to remain a firm favourite here in Cornwall.
Recently however it has seen a bit of a revival with chefs both down here and in other parts of the country increasingly putting it on their menus and a small holding in Norfolk has even begun growing the precious crop. So maybe one day saffron will grow again in the Duchy that has taken this delicious spice from ancient Persia into its culture and its heart.
So Saffron may not be in the shot above , but Cinnamon is - so there is my choice for a sight & sound ----
youtu.be/oMMUcHHD6ZY?feature=shared
Spices In The Round
Shot taken for Saturday Self Challenge 20/01/2023 --------
Herbs & Spices
I could have taken a shop name board as there is a nearby curry take-away called " Surrey Spice " , but that did not appeal . Instead I have just taken a shot of what spices I had to hand looking down from above . What I do not have which may have been more interesting to take a macro of would have been Saffron !! Pound for pound or gram for gram Saffron is more costly than Gold !!!
In fact it is the most expensive spice to buy and here are a few facts about Saffron ( with thanks to The Cornish Bird )
For most people Saffron is a captivating and expensive spice which conjures up images of mysterious distant lands but for hundreds of years to the Cornish it has been a more homely than exotic ingredient and seen throughout the land of Kernow in Saffron Buns and Saffron Loaf .
It is a story of much conjecture and hot debate as to when saffron first arrived in Cornwall. There are stories of Phoenician and Roman traders from more than 2000 years ago but the more likely answer is a little later than that. In the 14th century Cornwall had a healthy trade in tin with its Spanish neighbours, who in turn had trade routes across the globe, one theory is that saffron first arrived through them.
And this fantastic aromatic spice made its way into our Cornish cooking. Saffron buns and saffron cake are an integral part of any cakey tea (well they always have been in my house anyway!) just as much as clotted cream. And there is even some evidence that saffron was cultivated in a few select places in Cornwall for a while – there are records of saffron fields in Launcells near Bude, Fowey, Penryn, Feock and Gerrans.
Further evidence of saffron of this can be found in old place names. The Falmouth Packet newspaper recorded a dispute over a lease in Devoran, the plot was called Saffron Meadow had been leased in 1898 by Mr Robert Treneer Mitchell, who was reportedly using the field to grow flowers. Another plot known as Saffron Park is mentioned in deeds at Veryan, near Tregony.
Growing and harvesting saffron is what makes it the most expensive spice in the world, it is very labour intensive. Saffron is in fact the dried red stigma of the autumn flowering purple Crocus Sativus. Each flower has to be hand picked and the three delicate stigma removed. It takes roughly 200 flowers to produce just 1 gram of saffron. But the result is a versatile spice with a unique flavour.
The name saffron comes from the Arabic word za’faran meaning yellow which gives a clue to its other use as a dye. Saffron also has medicinal properties and known to have a similar narcotic effect to opium. During the 18th and 19th centuries it was used in various opioid preparations, such a laudanum, for pain relief.
Saffron went out of fashion in cooking in England but it continued to remain a firm favourite here in Cornwall.
Recently however it has seen a bit of a revival with chefs both down here and in other parts of the country increasingly putting it on their menus and a small holding in Norfolk has even begun growing the precious crop. So maybe one day saffron will grow again in the Duchy that has taken this delicious spice from ancient Persia into its culture and its heart.
So Saffron may not be in the shot above , but Cinnamon is - so there is my choice for a sight & sound ----
youtu.be/oMMUcHHD6ZY?feature=shared