A few years ago, while we were cooking, my SO showed me a blog post about common spices and their substitutions. I thought it’d be cool to use that to make a chart we could hang on the wall. It turned into a fun light research project, then a fun art project.

I started reading various blogs and realized that while many covered the same core spices, there were a lot of others that only one blog or another mentioned. So I started gathering them all up. As I read about them on Wikipedia I’d stumble into their histories, and scope creep hit. I decided to add a column for interesting facts about each. (While gathering those, I was kind of struck at the disparity between them - some spices, have centuries of warfare, murder, and espionage wrapped around them, while others are so common or easy to grow that nobody seems to have stabbed anyone at all for it.)

I built it first as a spreadsheet in Google sheets while I was researching, pasted it into a poster-size libre office writer document for layout and font changes, exported that as a pdf so I could import it into GIMP. That let me make more detailed changes and add the flourishes that hopefully make it look like something that might’ve hung on the wall in your grandparents’ kitchen.

This was a pretty casual project spread over seven months. It’s got forty-some spices with descriptions, fun facts, and substitutions shamelessly plagiarized from cooking blogs and Wikipedia.

I’ve learned since that several spices are actually really unspecific, like what’s sold as oregano apparently may come from several different plants. So I’ll say it’s useful for cooking and accurate to the best of my ability, but I wouldn’t reference it as a historical or scientific resources.

  • psyqology@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    Yes, please. The printable version would be awesome. Mind if i print it out and hang it in my kitchen?

  • okasen@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    This is fascinating. Thank you so much for sharing this! I might see if I can get it large-format printed for my kitchen. I feel like it need to be printed on like, cream/yellow paper and slowly stained from years of cooking. I hope that comes across as the compliment I mean it to be.

    • JacobCoffinWrites@slrpnk.netOP
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      1 year ago

      It 100% does! Some of my relatives framed or laminated theirs but I skipped it and hung ours over our main counter because I wanted it to aquire some character while we cooked together. I’m so glad you like it!

    • JacobCoffinWrites@slrpnk.netOP
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      1 year ago

      Food is such a fascinating aspect of history, (I got to do a class once called Bread and Culture and really enjoyed it). I love reading about ways people spread both concepts, recipes, entire ways of eating, along with all kinds of plants and animals as they traded, migrated, etc. And about how those recipes/processes were endlessly iterated on, combined and changed to fit new circumstances.

      Many of the plants over here are listed as ‘established’ I think meaning not native, but part enough of the local biosphere now that they might as well be. We received centuries of basically terraforming, for good or ill, before concepts like invasive species came around.

      Good luck with your research! I’d love to hear anything interesting you find!

  • preciouspupp@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Cool, although I would replace some of the substitutions with “just skip it”. For example cumin and anise tastes nothing like caraway and would be offending in most dishes calling for it.