Cumin Oil
Cumin Oil - Directory & Reference Resources
Cumin-From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia“geerah” redirects here. For other uses, see geerah (disambiguation).
Cumin
Scientific classificationKingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Apiales
Family: Apiaceae
Genus: Cuminum
Species: C. cyminum
Binomial name
Cuminum cyminum
L.
Cumin (Cuminum cyminum) (sometimes written cummin) is a flowering plant in the family Apiaceae, native from the east Mediterranean to East India.
It is a herbaceous annual plant, with a slender branched stem 20-30 cm tall. The leaves are 5-10 cm long, pinnate or bipinnate, thread-like leaflets. The flowers are small, white or pink, and borne in umbels. The fruit is a laterall fusiform or ovoid achene 4-5 mm long, containing a single seed. Cumin seeds are similar to fennel seeds, but are smaller and darker in colour.
Contents
1 Cultivation and uses
1.1 Description
1.2 Uses
1.3 Origins
1.4 Folklore
1.5 Medicinal Properties
2 History
2.1 Etymology
3 Confusion with other spices
4 Images
5 References
6 Further reading
Cultivation and uses
Cumin seeds are used as a spice for their distinctive aroma, popular in North African, Middle Eastern, western Chinese, Indian and Mexican cuisine.
Cumin fruits have a distinctive bitter flavour and strong, warm aroma due to their abundant essential oil content. Its main constituent and important aroma compound is cuminaldehyde (4-isopropylbenzaldehyde). Important aroma compounds of toasted cumin are the substituted pyrazines, 2-ethoxy-3-isopropylpyrazine, 2-methoxy-3-sec-butylpyrazine, and 2-methoxy-3-methylpyrazine.
Today, cumin is identified with Indian cuisine and Mexican cuisine. It is used as an ingredient of curry powder. Cumin can be found in some Dutch cheeses like Leyden cheese, and in some traditional breads from France. In herbal medicine, cumin is classified as stimulant, carminative, and antimicrobial.
Cumin can be used to season many dishes, as it draws out their natural sweetnesses. It is traditionally added to curries, enchiladas, tacos, and other Middle-eastern, Indian, Cuban and Mexican-style foods. It can also be added to salsa to give it extra flavour. Cumin has also been used on meat in addition to other common seasonings. The spice is a familiar taste in Tex-Mex dishes and is the lingua franca of the cuisines of the Indian subcontinent. Cumin was also used heavily in ancient Roman cuisine.
Cultivation of cumin requires a long, hot summer of 3-4 months, with daytime temperatures around 30°C (86°F); it is drought tolerant, and is mostly grown in mediterranean climates. It is grown from seed sown in spring, and needs a fertile, well-drained soil.
Cumin can be boiled in tea to make "cumin cider", first made by native Mexicans and spread throughout South America.
Description
Cumin is the dried seed of the herb Cuminum cyminum, a member of the parsley family. The cumin plant grows to about 1 to 2 feet tall and is harvested by hand. Cumin is a key component in both chili powder and curry powder.
Uses
The flavour of cumin plays a major role in Mexican, Thai, Vietnamese, and Indian cuisines. Cumin is a critical ingredient of chili powder, and is found in achiote blends, adobos, garam masala, curry powder, and baharat.
Origins
Historically, Iran has been the principal supplier of cumin, but currently the major sources are India, Syria, Pakistan, and Turkey.
Folklore
Superstition during the Middle Ages cited that cumin kept chickens and lovers from wandering. It was also believed that a happy life awaited the bride and groom who carried cumin seed throughout the wedding ceremony. Cumin is also said to help in treatment of the common cold, when added to hot milk and consumed.
Medicinal Properties
Cumin is stomachic, diuretic, carminative, stimulant, astringent, emmenagogic and antispasmodic. It is valuable in dyspepsia diarrhoea and hoarseness, and may relieve flatulence and colic. In the West, it is now used mainly in veterinary medicine, as a carminative, but it remains a traditional herbal remedy in the East. It is supposed to increase lactation and reduce nausea in pregnancy. It has been shown to be effective in treating carpal tunnel syndrome, as well as diarrhea, indigestion, and morning sickness. Cumin also shows promise as a natural way to increase breast size. Used in a poultice, it relieves swelling of the breast or the testicles. Cumin stimulates the appetite.
History
Cumin SeedsCumin has been in use since ancient times. Seeds, excavated at the Syrian site Tell ed-Der, have been dated to the second millennium BC. They have also been reported from several New Kingdom levels of ancient Egyptian archaeological sites.[1]
Originally cultivated in Iran and the Mediterranean region, cumin is mentioned in the Bible in both the Old Testament (Isaiah 28:27) and the New Testament (Matthew 23:23). It was also known in ancient Greece and Rome. The Greeks kept cumin at the dining table in its own container (much as pepper is frequently kept today), and this practice continues in Morocco. Cumin fell out of favour in Europe except in Spain and Malta during the Middle Ages. It was introduced to the Americas by Spanish colonists.
Since returned to favour in parts of Europe, today it is mostly grown in Iran, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Morocco, Egypt, India, Syria, Mexico, and Chile.
Etymology
The English form is derived from the Latin cuminum and Greek κύμινον. The Greek term itself seems to have been borrowed from a Semitic source; forms of this word are attested in several ancient Semitic languages, including Akkadian. The ultimate source seems to be the Sumerian word gamun [1].
A folk etymology connects the word with the Persian city Kerman, where, the story goes, most of ancient Persia's cumin was produced. For the Persians the expression "carrying cumin to Kerman" has the same meaning as the English language phrase "carrying coals to Newcastle". Kerman, locally called Kermun, would have became Kumun and then cumin in the European languages.
In India and Pakistan, cumin is known as jeera or geera; in Iran and Central Asia, cumin is known as zeera; in northwestern mainland China, cumin is known as ziran. In Arabic, it is known as kamun, (الكمــــــــون).
Confusion with other spices
Cumin is hotter to the taste, lighter in colour, and larger than caraway (Carum carvi), another umbelliferous spice that is sometimes confused with it. Some older cookbooks erroneously name ground coriander as the same spice as ground cumin. [2]
The distantly related Bunium persicum and the unrelated Nigella sativa are both sometimes called black cumin (q.v.).
In the Drake & Josh episode "The Affair", Drake Parker mistakes Cumin for cinnamon and ends up putting it on waffles meant for his step-father, Walter, then sees he is allergic to them.
Curcumin (related to cumin only phonetically) is a chemical constituent of turmeric.
Cumin seeds
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.527 oz)
Energy 370 kcal 1570 kJ
Carbohydrates 44.24 g
- Sugars 2.25 g
- Dietary fiber 10.5 g
Fat 22.27 g
- saturated 1.535 g
- monounsaturated 14.04 g
- polyunsaturated 3.279 g
Protein 17.81 g
Water 8.06 g
Vitamin A 64 μg 7%
Thiamin (Vit. B1) 0.628 mg 48%
Riboflavin (Vit. B2) 0.327 mg 22%
Niacin (Vit. B3) 4.579 mg 31%
Vitamin B6 0.435 mg 33%
Folate (Vit. B9) 10 μg 3%
Vitamin B12 0 μg 0%
Vitamin C 7.7 mg 13%
Vitamin E 3.33 mg 22%
Vitamin K 5.4 μg 5%
Calcium 931 mg 93%
Iron 66.36 mg 531%
Magnesium 366 mg 99%
Phosphorus 499 mg 71%
Potassium 1788 mg 38%
Sodium 168 mg 11%
Zinc 4.8 mg 48%
Percentages are relative to US
recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient database
Images
Dry, whole cumin fruit (or seed)
Whole cumin seeds and ground cumin
References
^ Daniel Zohary and Maria Hopf, Domestication of plants in the Old World, third edition (Oxford: University Press, 2000), p. 206
^ Growingtaste.com
Further reading
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