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Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods.

Grit in Sechuan Pepper



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 23-11-2004, 04:11 AM
ian
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Default Grit in Sechuan Pepper

Hi -

I have found my Thai bottled Sehuan Pepper to be gritty, and I think its
little bits of stone from the mortar it was ground in.

Does anyone have a sure-fire way of removing it? All I can think of is
droping it in water before use - perhaps the stone wil fall to the bottom.

A second possibility was to simmer it in oil, then strain the oil.

Anyway, any ideas are very welcome.

Thanks,

ian
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 25-11-2004, 03:06 AM
ian
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Default

ian wrote:
Hi -

I have found my Thai bottled Sehuan Pepper to be gritty, and I think its
little bits of stone from the mortar it was ground in.

Does anyone have a sure-fire way of removing it? All I can think of is
droping it in water before use - perhaps the stone wil fall to the bottom.

A second possibility was to simmer it in oil, then strain the oil.

Anyway, any ideas are very welcome.

Thanks,

ian


Well, I have my own answer to my question. The gritty sensation was from
the seed shells, not mortar chippings. The way around it is to use a
coffee/spice grinder to grind the peppers more finely.

ian
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 28-11-2004, 06:04 AM
Peter Dy
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Default


"ian" wrote in message
news:w6bpd.897$gH3.272@lakeread05...
ian wrote:
Hi -

I have found my Thai bottled Sehuan Pepper to be gritty, and I think its
little bits of stone from the mortar it was ground in.

Does anyone have a sure-fire way of removing it? All I can think of is
droping it in water before use - perhaps the stone wil fall to the
bottom.

A second possibility was to simmer it in oil, then strain the oil.

Anyway, any ideas are very welcome.

Thanks,

ian


Well, I have my own answer to my question. The gritty sensation was from
the seed shells, not mortar chippings. The way around it is to use a
coffee/spice grinder to grind the peppers more finely.



Ian, I think it's the very hard black seed of the peppercorn that is
responsible, not the shells. It's preferable to remove them, but sometimes
that's hard--especially since you bought yours ground already.

The best grades have them mostly removed.

Peter


  #4 (permalink)  
Old 28-11-2004, 06:04 AM
Peter Dy
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"ian" wrote in message
news:w6bpd.897$gH3.272@lakeread05...
ian wrote:
Hi -

I have found my Thai bottled Sehuan Pepper to be gritty, and I think its
little bits of stone from the mortar it was ground in.

Does anyone have a sure-fire way of removing it? All I can think of is
droping it in water before use - perhaps the stone wil fall to the
bottom.

A second possibility was to simmer it in oil, then strain the oil.

Anyway, any ideas are very welcome.

Thanks,

ian


Well, I have my own answer to my question. The gritty sensation was from
the seed shells, not mortar chippings. The way around it is to use a
coffee/spice grinder to grind the peppers more finely.



Ian, I think it's the very hard black seed of the peppercorn that is
responsible, not the shells. It's preferable to remove them, but sometimes
that's hard--especially since you bought yours ground already.

The best grades have them mostly removed.

Peter


 




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