Chile peppers know they’re getting some righteous attention when they get a writeup in Time Magazine. This article, which recently appeared as a link on CNN.com, offers some historical perspective along with a look at the latest hot pepper to grab people’s attention, the bhut jolokia.
Chili Peppers: Global Warming
By SIMON ROBINSON/TEZPUR, INDIAIn 1492, when Christopher Columbus set off from Spain to find a westward route to Asia, he was looking to secure Europe’s kitchen, not change it. Europeans had used black pepper as a medicinal aid and to spice up their cooking since Greek and Roman times. The ingredient, imported from the Spice Islands of Asia, had fueled the economies of trading ports like Alexandria, Genoa and Venice. But by the Middle Ages, black pepper had become a luxury item, so expensive that it was sold by the corn and used to pay rent and taxes. When the traditional land and sea routes to Asia were cut off by the rise of the Ottoman Empire, European traders looked for new ways to India and the lands beyond — not just for pepper but for other lucrative spices, and for silks and opium. Columbus headed west, certain he would find a new route to the East Indies. He never got there, of course, but in the islands of the New World the Italian navigator found a fiery pod that would, within years, not only infuse southern European cooking with bold new flavors but also revolutionize cooking in India, China and Thailand, the very places he’d set out to reach.
The remarkable spread of the chili (or chilli, or chile, or chile pepper, to use just a few of its myriad names and spellings) is a piquant chapter in the story of globalization. Few other foods have been taken up by so many people in so many places so quickly. Ask a Chinese chili lover or an Indian or a Thai and most will swear that chilies are native to their homeland, so integral is the spice to their cooking, so deeply embedded is it in their culture. European and American chili addicts, though less numerous, are just as passionate about the spice.
Click here to read the rest of this article
Popularity: 43% [?]
» Taking the chile pepper harvest to the next level
» Chile peppers in academia
» Looking for Festive Decorative Ideas?
» Mirasol chiles have notoriety? Go figure.

No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI




















![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](valid-rss.png)