V-Slicer V8 Juice Vache Qui Rit Cheese Vacherin Chaput Cheese Vacherin d'Abondance Vacherin du Haut-Doubs Vacherin Fribourgeois Vacherin Mont d'Or Valdeón Cheese Valdôtaine -- À la Valencia Oranges Valencia Peanuts Valenciano Pumpkins Valencienne -- À la Valentine Beans Valentine Buns Valerian Valetta Potatoes Valisa Potatoes Vallarta Beans Vallée des Baux Cracked Olives Valor Potatoes Van Cherries Van Der Hum Cream Liqueur Van Gogh Potatoes Vandevere Apples Vanessa Potatoes Vanilla Vanilla -- Marseille Vanilla Baking Powder Vanilla Bean Paste Vanilla Essence Vanilla Extract Vanilla Ice Cream Vanilla Pod Previous | Next | Ground Pepper© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedGround Pepper is peppercorns that have been ground. Generally, it comes already ground, in black or white versions. There is currently a mania for -- nay, a tyranny of -- "freshly" Ground Pepper. Some feel that thought it all started off reasonably enough, it then got out of hand. Take salt as a starting point. There are what is called "finishing salts" -- those are the more expensive salts that you use for presentation at the table or add at the very last minute so that their texture or taste doesn't get dissolved right into and lost in the dish. Crunchy Maldon salt on a steak fresh off the barbeque is heaven; tossed into water to boil pasta in is pointless (pace Nigella Lawson.) It just shows no basic understanding of that ingredient that you paid good money for. Freshly Ground Pepper is the same. Why labour to grind pepper over a teaspoon for 5 minutes, hoping that most of it actually lands in the teaspoon, when you're about to simmer it for two hours? When you're incorporating Ground Pepper into a recipe that is going to be cooked, just use the already ground pepper. Don't abandon the freshly ground -- but put the grinder on the table as a "finishing pepper", right next to your "finishing salt", so that your guests can enjoy its freshness.
Also called: Poivre moulu (French); Pepe macinato (Italian); Pimienta molida (Spanish); Pimenta do reino (Portuguese); Piper tritum (Roman)
Other entries for:PepperCubeb, Grains of Paradise, Ground Pepper, Lemon Pepper, Long Pepper, Mignonette, Negro Pepper, Pepato, Peppercorns, Peppers, Szechuan Peppercorns, Tirphal, Uziza Pepper, White Pepper Other entries for:SpicesAjowan Seed, Allspice, Anardana, Anise, Annatto, Asafoetida, Caraway, Cardamom, Chocolate, Cinnamon, Cloves, Cream of Tartar, Cumin, Dried Lily Buds, Garlic Powder, Ginger, Juniper Berries, Kokum, Mustard, Nigella, Nutmeg, Paprika, Saffron, Salt, Sumac, Turmeric, Zedoary |
|

