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Sichuan Peppercorns, Long-Banned Chinese Spice, Gains National Audience


First Posted: 03/ 1/2012 1:34 pm Updated: 03/ 1/2012 1:34 pm

Once you eat a dish that uses Sichuan peppercorns, you aren't likely to forget it. The tingly mouth sensation produced by the tiny crimson pods -- which are the berries of a tree, the prickly ash, in the citrus family -- is unlike any other. People have compared it to spearmint and electricity, to juniper and novocaine, but no analogy quite works. It's most often paired with chili peppers, in Sichuan cuisine, to create an effect called ma la, often translated as spicy and tingly. When it's done right, there are few better flavors in all of food.

For that reason, it's no surprise that when Bret Thorn, of Nation's Restaurant News, asked chefs around the country about their experiences with Sichuan peppercorn, he got a lot of enthusiastic responses. Thorn found people at both Western and Chinese restaurants who extolled the benefits of the peppercorn in dishes across the menu, from salad to dessert.

What makes the national enthusiasm remarkable is that it comes just a few years after it looked like Sichuan peppercorns might leave the country altogether.

Import of the spice was banned in 1968, out of fear that it would spread a bacterial disease, citrus canker, that can be ruinous for citrus trees. (The prickly ash tree was known to harbor the disease in China, and it was unclear whether it could be spread via peppercorns.) Enforcement was lax enough that many restaurateurs were able to get a steady supply of peppercorns -- until about 2003, when the USDA cracked down. Chefs were left high and dry, and good Sichuan cuisine became an increasingly difficult prospect.

Then, in 2005, the ban was lifted altogether, at least for peppercorns heated to 170 degrees, to kill bacteria. That paved the way for something like a national Renaissance in Sichuan cuisine -- in evidence every time a mouth-tingling plate of razor clams with Szechuan peppercorn pesto is served at Manhattan's Szechuan Gourmet.

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Once you eat a dish that uses Sichuan peppercorns, you aren't likely to forget it. The tingly mouth sensation produced by the tiny crimson pods -- which are the berries of a tree, the prickly ash, in ...
Once you eat a dish that uses Sichuan peppercorns, you aren't likely to forget it. The tingly mouth sensation produced by the tiny crimson pods -- which are the berries of a tree, the prickly ash, in ...
Once you eat a dish that uses Sichuan peppercorns, you aren't likely to forget it. The tingly mouth sensation produced by the tiny crimson pods -- which are the berries of a tree, the prickly ash, in ...
Once you eat a dish that uses Sichuan peppercorns, you aren't likely to forget it. The tingly mouth sensation produced by the tiny crimson pods -- which are the berries of a tree, the prickly ash, in ...
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09:18 AM on 03/03/2012
I use these to make my own five spice blend. You just can't make good char siu without them!
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02:35 PM on 03/02/2012
I had fresh ones from China, no comparison to the ones here in America, truly face numbing !
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
05:32 PM on 03/01/2012
Interesting. So, a year or 2 ago I went to the Asian grocery store for some off hand ingredients and one of the things I needed was chili oil. I ended up getting "Szechuan Chili Oil" which was not at all what I expected. It wasn't spicy at all. Quite to the contrary it was almost cooling, like mint. The flavor it left was almost piney or like juniper. I didn't like the stuff at ALL. I guess this article just solved the mystery of the non-spicy chili oil.
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
03:15 PM on 03/01/2012
I have been buying Sichuan peppercorns for years and didn't know I was breaking the law.
09:35 PM on 03/01/2012
Right.... I have been using them at home since I first tried them in the late 1980's
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French Toast
MAPLE SYRUP
12:37 AM on 03/02/2012
You were a rebel without a clue...that you were a rebel at all.
03:14 PM on 03/01/2012
I'm not a timid eater, but these things aren't my friend. The juniper/novacaine analogy is pretty close. I like the flavor, but "ugh!" if I bite into one of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
plasmaorb
The GOP cant afford Common Sense
05:19 PM on 03/01/2012
Thats why i put mine into a mortar before hand.. to grind it up... get the same affect with the numbing sensation, but without feeling like im biting into a pebble.