Will the real Cinnamon please stand up... (off-topic)

Frank Cooper gentian21@comcast.net
Tue, 01 Dec 2009 21:19:35 PST
I always thought that the cinnamon I grew up with was true cinnamon and around the 60's they started using cassia and were just learning how to make non-food to masquerade as food.  I remember cinnamon not burning at all. Maybe it depends when you grew up. I am surprised that anybody still buys the bottled spices at all since every grocery or ethnic store here sells packaged or bulk spices at much lower prices and you can just buy a spoonful of something for a few cents.  You can judge the freshness better.  I prefer to get all my spices mail order where they prepare spices fresh daily and at much lower prices than the bottled spices at grocery stores.  The fragrance is amazing when you open a bottle of spices that was prepared a couple days ago.  The best spices are not the most expensive at all.

Frank Cooper

central Illinois

zone 5b
 
> Date: Tue, 1 Dec 2009 17:46:18 -0800
> From: idavide@sbcglobal.net
> To: pbs@lists.ibiblio.org
> Subject: Re: [pbs] Will the real Cinnamon please stand up... (off-topic)
> 
> If you have a well frequented Mexican grocery nearby, they sell true cinnamon, and it is usually cheaper than anywhere else.
> 
> One caution you should take, especially if buying say McCormick spices at a regular grocery -- they do not date their spices.  You might buy a jar of anis seed with no flavor whatsoever because it's a decade old.  Always test your spice before buying.  Even at Penzey's.
> 
> Is it possible that domestic cinnamon's fungicidal/pesticidal effect could be due to poisons such as coumarin?  In that case, true cinnamon, which is made from the inner bark of C. verum rather then the entire bark of C. aromaticum might be ineffective.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ________________________________
> From: Jim McKenney <jimmckenney@jimmckenney.com>
> To: Pacific Bulb Society <pbs@lists.ibiblio.org>
> Sent: Tue, December 1, 2009 9:08:37 AM
> Subject: Re: [pbs] Will the real Cinnamon please stand up... (off-topic)
> 
> We have the advantage of a Penzey’s store here in the neighborhood, and so
> we’ve been enjoying “true” cinnamon for years. Take Mark’s advice and try
> it: it does not taste like the cinnamon most of us are used to. For one
> thing, the taste sensation is much milder, and it’s a different taste. I’ve
> read that “cinnamon” in the UK, Mexico and Germany means “true” cinnamon, so
> adjust recipes from those areas accordingly if you want the intended effect.
> It’s not that “true” cinnamon is better; it’s just a different taste
> experience. If you really like the cinnamon most of us grew up with, the
> taste of “true” cinnamon will probably be a disappointment. On the other
> hand,  as Mark points out, the Vietnamese Extra Fancy is an intensification
> of the stuff most of us know and love.
> 
> Incidentally, Penzey’s prices for bagged herbs and spices (in contrast to
> their prices for bottled ones) are often MUCH lower per unit volume or by
> weight than the prices of the ones in grocery stores. Common things like
> thyme, which approach $5 per 0.62 oz bottle in the grocery stores,  are sold
> in plastic bags at $6.29 for four ounces: that’s a huge savings if you use
> thyme as freely as I do. 
> 
> Other sources for inexpensive spices are the Indian stores or the aisle in
> your grocery store which offers ethnic foods. Certain items which I use a
> lot of, such as aniseed, are much less expensive there. One of our local
> grocery stores briefly offered a line of Indian packed spices. The prices
> for these were so much lower than the ones packed by the big name American
> outfits that I stocked up on some and put them in the freezer. Ground
> cardamom, which tends to be pricy, was very inexpensive. I bought one (while
> the little voice in my head reminded me of the many books which say never
> buy ground cardamom), took it home and tried it (great!) and went back for
> more. I wasn’t the only one who caught on to this and these products soon
> disappeared from the shelves, never to be replaced.  
> 
> Hmmm...maybe I'll make some cookies today.  
> 
> 
> Jim McKenney
> jimmckenney@jimmckenney.com
> Montgomery County, Maryland, USA, 39.03871º North, 77.09829º West, USDA zone
> 7, where I have some fresh bay cuttings I'm about to stick in one of the
> cold frames. 
> My Virtual Maryland Garden http://www.jimmckenney.com/
> BLOG! http://mcwort.blogspot.com/
> 
> Webmaster Potomac Valley Chapter, NARGS 
> Editor PVC Bulletin http://www.pvcnargs.org/ 
> 
> Webmaster Potomac Lily Society http://www.potomaclilysociety.org/
> 
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> 
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> 
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