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Anna Brones

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5 Reasons To Love Cardamom

Posted: 02/09/2012 9:42 am

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This is the latest installment of Foodie Underground.

High end ramen, breakfast for dinner, sparkling water: We spend a lot of time discovering and discussing food trends on Foodie Underground. It's a dichotomous pursuit. There are the evenings spent complaining to friends about how fed up with the foodie world I am (bone luging, really? yet another cupcake store, must we?). Naturally, in the next sentence, I'm going on about my sea salt and olive oil polenta cake in the oven.

"Sea salt, Anna, really?"

"But sea salt is really good in cake. I swear."

Pause.

"Want to try this cardamom chocolate cake instead?" Tease all they want, I know they're not going to turn it down.

No matter how much your friends roll their eyes at a foodie's obsession, one can always quell their serving of sass with what one cooks up. Appreciation for good homemade food is universal.

But about those trends. Today: cardamom.

Go take a look in your spice cabinet. What do you see? A half-empty container of powdered ginger that's more yellow mass than powder? Vietnamese cinnamon you haven't used since that botched chai recipe in graduate school's chai-and-soy-I-don't-do-coffee days? Turmeric that you don't dare use because... well, because it's so damn technicolor?

Get rid of them -- all of them -- and make room for cardamom, your new spice of choice.

I have a personal long-standing love affair with cardamom, it being the basis of practically every Swedish baked good ever created -- thank you, Vikings. It has been a longtime staple in my culinary adventures, but lately I've noticed that whenever I see a restaurant that employs one word for its name (or two words connected by an ampersand in Helvetica of course), I can be certain there will be cardamom on the menu. Cardamom is the food world's latest "it spice."

This spice deserves any accolade a food lover gives it. It's versatile, delicious and sexy in everything from desserts to main courses. Yes, it's expensive, coming in after saffron and vanilla, but there's good reason that this India-born spice is the new épice du jour.

Here are five reasons you should (and will) fall in love with cardamom.

1. Cardamom is exotic. It is sexy.

Cardamom has a distinct and complex flavor. Bonus: Anything you put the spice in is automatically going to sound more alluring that the original version.

Just read the following variations out loud:
Orange ice cream. Orange cardamom ice cream.
Roasted potatoes. Cardamom roasted potatoes.
Saffron macaroons. Saffron-cardamom macaroons.

And so forth. Thanks to this spice, you can instantly turn yourself into a creative, culinary genius, which of course will be a hit for your food-related dating endeavors. It's marketing, baby! (Fortunately, the product backs up the hype.)

2. Cardamom goes well with coffee.

"Must be some Scandinavian thing," a friend of mine responded to a comment I had made about never being able to put too much cardamom in my coffee.

I'm not certain putting cardamom in coffee is an actual Scandinavian habit, but my Swedish-born mother has been doing it since before I can remember, and she buys cardamom in bulk quantities to ensure that we never run out. Having the economic sensibilities of every other food-loving twentysomething, I always fill a plastic bag up when I go home to visit my parents to avoid having to purchase it myself.

Add a pinch (or two, or three) to your morning brew and let it work its magic. You'll quickly understand my obsession.

3. Cardamom is both sweet and savory.

The beauty of cardamom is that it goes just as well with pastries as it does in a lamb tagine.

For a quick and easy sweet tasting cardamom recipe, try my favorite Cardamom Cake.

Ingredients:


  • 2 cups flour

  • 3 teaspoons ground cardamom

  • 1 tablespoon baking powder

  • 1/2 cup sugar

  • 7 tablespoons butter

  • 1 egg

  • 1 cup milk


Instructions:

-Mix dry ingredients in a bowl. Add in butter with your fingers and mix until crumbly consistency.
-Add in egg and milk and mix until a batter consistency.
-Pour into a greased 9.5 inch circular baking pan. If you want to, sprinkle with sliced almonds or orange zest. (The one pictured above uses Swedish pearl sugar, which you can buy at IKEA or import food stores).
-Bake at 400 F for about 30 minutes.

4. You can get creative with cardamom.

I have found that any recipe that requires any element of spice can be adapted to include cardamom. Food52 ran a contest with cardamom inspired recipes, resulting in everything from Bellinis to granola.

If you have yet to go out on a foodie limb, cardamom could just be your gateway spice. Start small. Add a little cardamom to your hot chocolate, for example. Then graduate to more complex creations, like cardamom in a butternut squash soup.

Just remember to go easy; too much cardamom and your recipe will taste more like medicine than food.

5. You can please omnivores, vegans, the gluten-intolerant and your grandmother. 

There's a cardamom recipe for everyone.
The Meat Lover: Cocoa Cardamom Steak Rub
The Vegan: Cardamom Macadamia Nut Pancakes
The Europhile: Fig and Cardamom Spiced Tiramisu
Your Conventional Grandmother: Cardamom-Spiced Meatloaf
The Bacon Lover: Sugared Cardamom Bacon
The Gluten Intolerant: Cardamom and Orange Quinoa Cookies
The Bartender: No. 4 - a cocktail with gin and cardamom
Now get yourself to the grocery store and stock your spice cabinet. You have delicious to do.

More from Foodie Underground:
When Food Trends go Wrong: Bone Luge
Why Travel Teaches Us to Appreciate Good Food
How to Formulate the Foolproof Foodie Menu

Editor's note: This is the latest installment of Anna Brones's weekly column at EcoSalon, Foodie Underground, discovering what's new and different in the underground food movement, from supper clubs to mini markets to the culinary avant garde.

Image: Anna Brones

 

Follow Anna Brones on Twitter: www.twitter.com/annabrones

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
InedaName
Clowns to the Left of me. Jokers to the Right.
09:58 PM on 02/20/2012
I like cardamom and pears together. I used some in a pear and ginger scone recipe and people ate them all up. Gotta say I'm intrigued by that cardamom roasted potatoes recipe.
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01:21 PM on 02/15/2012
Hi, you weren't clear - do you add the cardamon to your coffee grounds and then brew, or add to your already brewed coffee.

BTW - I don't find cardamon all that more expensive than other spices. And try using your tumeric - it adds a golden glow to rice dishes, pasta, baked goods, potatoes, stews. A lot of places you use cardamon in fact.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
05:25 PM on 02/09/2012
I've been using cardomom since I make a braid of cardomom bread 20 years ago.

If I have to doctor up a box cake mix, I'll add a little vanilla and a few dashes of cardomom. It does wonders for that bland white cake mix.
04:20 PM on 02/09/2012
Black cardamom was in the secret recipe for the winning Bloody Mary on an episode of Cheers. I guess what was old is new again. Once the younger generation claims it, we all must bow again. Sort of like breakfast for dinner, that's just insanity. Eggs or crepes after 11 AM, crazy talk.
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darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
03:57 PM on 02/09/2012
May I suggest Nutmeg as your next topic?

I find its taste compelling and supposedly it will get you high if you ingest enough to make you sick to your stomach.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karl Wilder
Chef Stirring The Pot Harlem
02:07 PM on 02/09/2012
While you make a good case for the this spice there is no reason to rid oneself of ginger nor turmeric, both of which I use often and both of which are good for your health.

You do not need to degrade one seasoning to elevate another.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tweeksmom
Pppfffftttttttt.....
01:09 PM on 02/09/2012
Do we really need to moderate a thread about cardamom? Really?
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darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
03:55 PM on 02/09/2012
Just you wait. I plan on getting controversial.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tweeksmom
Pppfffftttttttt.....
04:58 PM on 02/09/2012
LOL!
01:00 PM on 02/09/2012
Loved this article!

And now I know I'm correct in my disdain for a local bakery-cafe that is called "Cardamom" but the owner and baker had never heard of the spice, when I asked what they made that had it! There was not one single item at that bakery that even contains cardamom. Lame!

I never went back.
11:45 AM on 02/09/2012
Anna, stay thy hand! Don't throw out that turmeric--it's one of the very best foods for your body. If you can't use it straight up, replace it with curry powder, which has turmeric in it and makes any veggie dish exotic and flavorful.
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
11:44 AM on 02/09/2012
Thank you for this reminder.
We learned to love Cardamom when Afghans moved in to our neighborhood.
They had a recipe for a coffee cake called Roat (similar to your recipe above, except for the crumbly butter part) which is fabulous.
They also added it to coffee.
Their home had the most exotic, warm aroma from the spice.
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satanlite
Liberal blogger
10:56 AM on 02/09/2012
Great article!