Everything about Black Pepper totally explained
Black pepper (
Piper nigrum) is a
flowering vine in the family
Piperaceae, cultivated for its
fruit, which is usually dried and used as a
spice and
seasoning. The same fruit is also used to produce white pepper, red/pink pepper, and green pepper. Black pepper is native to
South India (Tamil: milagu, மிளகு; Telugu: miriyam) and is extensively cultivated there and elsewhere in tropical regions. The
fruit, known as a peppercorn when dried, is a small
drupe five millimetres in diameter, dark red when fully mature, containing a single
seed.
Dried ground pepper is one of the most common spices in European
cuisine and its descendants, having been known and prized since antiquity for both its flavour and its use as a
medicine. The spiciness of black pepper is due to the chemical
piperine. Ground black peppercorn, usually referred to simply as "pepper", may be found on nearly every dinner table in some parts of the world, often alongside
table salt.
The word "pepper" is derived from the
Sanskrit pippali, the word for
long pepper via the
Latin piper which was used by the Romans to refer both to pepper and long pepper, as the Romans erroneously believed that both of these spices were derived from the same plant. The English word for pepper is derived from the
Old English pipor. The Latin word is also the source of
German pfeffer,
French poivre,
Dutch peper, and other similar forms. In the 16th century,
pepper started referring to the unrelated
New World chile peppers as well. "Pepper" was used in a figurative sense to mean "spirit" or "energy" at least as far back as the 1840s; in the early 20th century, this was shortened to
pep.
Varieties
Black pepper is produced from the still-green unripe
berries of the pepper plant. The berries are cooked briefly in hot water, both to clean them and to prepare them for drying. The heat ruptures
cell walls in the fruit, speeding the work of
browning enzymes during drying. The berries are dried in the sun or by machine for several days, during which the fruit around the seed shrinks and darkens into a thin, wrinkled black layer, the result of a fungal reaction. Once dried, the fruits are called black peppercorns.
White pepper consists of the seed only, with the fruit removed. This is usually accomplished by allowing fully ripe berries to soak in water for about a week, during which the flesh of the fruit softens and
decomposes. Rubbing then removes what remains of the fruit, and the naked seed is dried. Alternative processes are used for removing the outer fruit from the seed, including removal of the outer layer from black pepper produced from unripe berries.
In the U.S., white pepper is often used in dishes like light-colored
sauces or
mashed potatoes, where ground black pepper would visibly stand out. There is disagreement regarding which is generally spicier. They do have differing flavors due to the presence of certain compounds in the outer fruit layer of the berry that are not found in the seed.
Green pepper, like black, is made from the unripe berries. Dried green peppercorns are treated in a manner that retains the green colour, such as treatment with
sulfur dioxide or
freeze-drying. Pickled peppercorns, also green, are unripe berries preserved in
brine or
vinegar. Fresh, unpreserved green pepper berries, largely unknown in the West, are used in some
Asian cuisines, particularly
Thai cuisine. Their flavor has been described as piquant and fresh, with a bright aroma. They decay quickly if not dried or preserved.
A rarely seen product called pink pepper or red pepper consists of ripe red pepper berries preserved in brine and vinegar. Even more rarely seen, ripe red peppercorns can also be dried using the same colour-preserving techniques used to produce green pepper. Pink pepper from
Piper nigrum is distinct from the more-common dried "pink peppercorns", which are the fruits of a plant from a different family, the
Peruvian pepper tree,
Schinus molle, and its relative the
Brazilian pepper tree,
Schinus terebinthifolius. In years past there was debate as to the health safety of pink peppercorns, which is mostly no longer an issue.
Sichuan peppercorn is another "pepper" that's botanically unrelated to black pepper.
Peppercorns are often categorised under a label describing their region or port of origin. Two well-known types come from
India's
Malabar Coast: Malabar pepper and
Tellicherry pepper. Tellicherry is a higher-grade pepper, made from the largest, ripest 10% of berries from Malabar plants grown on Mount Tellicherry.
Sarawak pepper is produced in the
Malaysian portion of
Borneo, and
Lampong pepper on
Indonesia's island of
Sumatra. White
Muntok pepper is another Indonesian product, from
Bangka Island.
The pepper plant
The pepper plant is a
perennial woody vine growing to four metres in height on supporting
trees, poles, or trellises. It is a spreading vine,
rooting readily where trailing stems touch the ground. The
leaves are alternate, entire, five to ten centimetres long and three to six centimetres broad. The
flowers are small, produced on pendulous spikes four to eight centimetres long at the leaf nodes, the spikes lengthening to seven to 15 centimeters as the fruit matures.
Black pepper is grown in soil that's neither too dry nor susceptible to
flooding, moist, well-drained and rich in organic matter. The plants are propagated by cuttings about 40 to 50 centimetres long, tied up to neighbouring trees or climbing frames at distances of about two metres apart; trees with rough bark are favoured over those with smooth bark, as the pepper plants climb rough bark more readily. Competing plants are cleared away, leaving only sufficient trees to provide shade and permit free ventilation. The roots are covered in leaf
mulch and
manure, and the shoots are trimmed twice a year. On dry soils the young plants require watering every other day during the dry season for the first three years. The plants bear fruit from the fourth or fifth year, and typically continue to bear fruit for seven years. The cuttings are usually
cultivars, selected both for yield and quality of fruit.
A single stem will bear 20 to 30 fruiting spikes. The harvest begins as soon as one or two berries at the base of the spikes begin to turn red, and before the fruit is mature, but when full grown and still hard; if allowed to ripen, the berries lose pungency, and ultimately fall off and are lost. The spikes are collected and spread out to dry in the sun, then the peppercorns are stripped off the spikes.
History
Pepper has been used as a spice in India since
prehistoric times. Pepper is native to
India and has been known to Indian cooking since at least 2000 BCE. J. Innes Miller notes that while pepper was grown in southern
Thailand and in Malaysia, its most important source was
India, particularly the
Malabar Coast, in what is now the state of
Kerala. Peppercorns were a much prized trade good, often referred to as "black gold" and used as a form of
commodity money. The term "
peppercorn rent" still exists today.
The ancient history of black pepper is often interlinked with (and confused with) that of
long pepper, the
dried fruit of closely related
Piper longum. The Romans knew of both and often referred to either as just "piper". In fact, it wasn't until the discovery of the New World and of
chile peppers that the popularity of long pepper entirely declined. Chile peppers, some of which when dried are similar in shape and taste to long pepper, were easier to grow in a variety of locations more convenient to Europe.
Until well after the
Middle Ages, virtually all of the black pepper found in Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa travelled there from India's Malabar region. By the 16th century, pepper was also being grown in
Java,
Sunda,
Sumatra,
Madagascar, Malaysia, and elsewhere in Southeast Asia, but these areas traded mainly with China, or used the pepper locally. Ports in the Malabar area also served as a stop-off point for much of the trade in other spices from farther east in the Indian Ocean.
Black pepper, along with other spices from India and lands farther east, changed the course of world history. It was in some part the preciousness of these spices that led to the European efforts to find a sea route to India and consequently to the European colonial occupation of that country, as well as the European discovery and colonization of the Americas.
Ancient times
Black peppercorns were found lodged in the nostrils of
Ramesses II, placed there as part of the
mummification rituals shortly after his death in 1213 BCE. Little else is known about the use of pepper in
ancient Egypt, nor how it reached the
Nile from India.
Pepper (both long and black) was known in Greece at least as early as the 4th century BCE, though it was probably an uncommon and expensive item that only the very rich could afford. Trade routes of the time were by land, or in ships which hugged the coastlines of the
Arabian Sea. Long pepper, growing in the north-western part of India, was more accessible than the black pepper from further south; this trade advantage, plus long pepper's greater spiciness, probably made black pepper less popular at the time.
By the time of the early
Roman Empire, especially after Rome's conquest of Egypt in 30 BCE, open-ocean crossing of the Arabian Sea directly to
southern India's Malabar Coast was near routine. Details of this trading across the Indian Ocean have been passed down in the
Periplus of the Erythraean Sea. According to the Roman geographer
Strabo, the early Empire sent a fleet of around 120 ships on an annual one-year trip to India and back. The fleet timed its travel across the Arabian Sea to take advantage of the predictable
monsoon winds. Returning from India, the ships travelled up the
Red Sea, from where the cargo was carried overland or via the
Nile Canal to the Nile River, barged to
Alexandria, and shipped from there to Italy and Rome. The rough geographical outlines of this same trade route would dominate the pepper trade into Europe for a millennium and a half to come.
With ships sailing directly to the Malabar coast, black pepper was now travelling a shorter trade route than long pepper, and the prices reflected it.
Pliny the Elder's
Natural History tells us the prices in Rome around 77
CE: "Long pepper ... is fifteen
denarii per pound, while that of white pepper is seven, and of black, four." Pliny also complains "there is no year in which India doesn't drain the Roman Empire of fifty million
sesterces," and further moralises on pepper:
It is quite surprising that the use of pepper has come so much into fashion, seeing that in other substances which we use, it's sometimes their sweetness, and sometimes their appearance that has attracted our notice; whereas, pepper has nothing in it that can plead as a recommendation to either fruit or berry, its only desirable quality being a certain pungency; and yet it's for this that we import it all the way from India! Who was the first to make trial of it as an article of food? and who, I wonder, was the man that wasn't content to prepare himself by hunger only for the satisfying of a greedy appetite? (N.H. 12.14)
Black pepper was a well-known and widespread, if expensive, seasoning in the
Roman Empire.
Apicius'
De re coquinaria, a 3rd-century cookbook probably based at least partly on one from the 1st century CE, includes pepper in a majority of its recipes.
Edward Gibbon wrote, in
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, that pepper was "a favourite ingredient of the most expensive Roman cookery".
Postclassical Europe
Pepper was so valuable that it was often used as
collateral or even currency. The taste for pepper (or the appreciation of its monetary value) was passed on to those who would see Rome fall. It is said that
Alaric the
Visigoth and
Attila the Hun each demanded from
Rome a ransom of more than a ton of pepper when they besieged the city in 5th century. After the fall of Rome, others took over the middle legs of the
spice trade, first the
Persians and then the
Arabs; Innes Miller cites the account of
Cosmas Indicopleustes, who travelled east to India, as proof that "pepper was still being exported from India in the sixth century". By the end of the
Dark Ages, the central portions of the spice trade were firmly under
Islamic control. Once into the Mediterranean, the trade was largely monopolised by Italian powers, especially
Venice and
Genoa. The rise of these
city-states was funded in large part by the spice trade.
A
riddle authored by
Saint Aldhelm, a 7th-century
Bishop of Sherborne, sheds some light on black pepper's role in
England at that time:
» I am black on the outside, clad in a wrinkled cover,
Yet within I bear a burning marrow. » I season delicacies, the banquets of kings, and the luxuries of the table,
Both the sauces and the tenderized meats of the kitchen. » But you'll find in me no quality of any worth,
Unless your bowels have been rattled by my gleaming marrow.
It is commonly believed that during the
Middle Ages, pepper was used to conceal the taste of partially rotten meat. There is no evidence to support this claim, and historians view it as highly unlikely: in the Middle Ages, pepper was a luxury item, affordable only to the wealthy, who certainly had unspoiled meat available as well. In addition, people of the time certainly knew that eating spoiled food would make them sick. Similarly, the belief that pepper was widely used as a preservative is questionable: it's true that piperine, the compound that gives pepper its spiciness, has some antimicrobial properties, but at the concentrations present when pepper is used as a spice, the effect is small. Salt is a much more effective preservative, and
salt-cured meats were common fare, especially in winter. However, pepper and other spices probably did play a role in improving the taste of long-preserved meats.
Its exorbitant price during the Middle Ages — and the monopoly on the trade held by Italy — was one of the inducements which led the
Portuguese to seek a sea route to India. In 1498,
Vasco da Gama became the first European to reach India by sea; asked by Arabs in
Calicut (who spoke Spanish and Italian) why they'd come, his representative replied, "we seek
Christians and spices." Though this first trip to India by way of the southern tip of
Africa was only a modest success, the Portuguese quickly returned in greater numbers and used their superior naval firepower to eventually gain complete control of trade on the Arabian sea. It was given additional legitimacy (at least from a European perspective) by the 1494
Treaty of Tordesillas, which granted Portugal exclusive rights to the half of the world where black pepper originated.
The Portuguese proved unable to maintain their stranglehold on the spice trade for long. The old Arab and Venetian trade networks successfully smuggled enormous quantities of spices through the patchy Portuguese blockade, and pepper once again flowed through Alexandria and Italy, as well as around Africa. In the 17th century, the Portuguese lost almost all of their valuable Indian Ocean possessions to the
Dutch and the
English. The pepper ports of Malabar fell to the Dutch in the period 1661–1663.
As pepper supplies into Europe increased, the price of pepper declined (though the total value of the import trade generally did not). Pepper, which in the early Middle Ages had been an item exclusively for the rich, started to become more of an everyday seasoning among those of more average means. Today, pepper accounts for one-fifth of the world's spice trade.
China
It is possible that black pepper was known in
China in the 2nd century BCE, if poetic reports regarding an explorer named Tang Meng (唐蒙) are correct. Sent by
Emperor Wu to what is now south-west China, Tang Meng is said to have come across something called
jujiang or "sauce-betel". He was told it came from the markets of
Shu, an area in what is now the
Sichuan province. The traditional view among historians is that "sauce-betel" is a sauce made from
betel leaves, but arguments have been made that it actually refers to pepper, either long or black.
In the 3rd century CE, black pepper made its first definite appearance in Chinese texts, as
hujiao or "foreign pepper". It doesn't appear to have been widely known at the time, failing to appear in a 4th-century work describing a wide variety of spices from beyond China's southern border, including long pepper. By the 12th century, however, black pepper had become a popular ingredient in the cuisine of the wealthy and powerful, sometimes taking the place of China's native
Sichuan pepper (the tongue-numbing dried fruit of an unrelated plant).
Marco Polo testifies to pepper's popularity in 13th-century China when he relates what he's told of its consumption in the city of Kinsay (
Zhejiang): "... Messer Marco heard it stated by one of the Great Kaan's officers of customs that the quantity of pepper introduced daily for consumption into the city of Kinsay amounted to 43 loads, each load being equal to 223 lbs." Marco Polo isn't considered a very reliable source regarding China, and this second-hand data may be even more suspect, but if this estimated 10,000 pounds (4,500 kg) a day for one city is anywhere near the truth, China's pepper imports may have dwarfed Europe's.
Pepper as a medicine
Like all eastern spices, pepper was historically both a seasoning and a medicine. Long pepper, being stronger, was often the preferred medication, but both were used.
Black peppercorns figure in remedies in
Ayurveda,
Siddha and
Unani medicine in
India. The 5th century
Syriac Book of Medicines prescribes pepper (or perhaps long pepper) for such illnesses as
constipation,
diarrhea,
earache,
gangrene,
heart disease,
hernia, hoarseness,
indigestion, insect bites,
insomnia, joint pain,
liver problems,
lung disease, oral
abscesses,
sunburn,
tooth decay, and
toothaches. Various sources from the 5th century onward also recommend pepper to treat eye problems, often by applying salves or poultices made with pepper directly to the eye. There is no current medical evidence that any of these treatments has any benefit; pepper applied directly to the eye would be quite uncomfortable and possibly damaging.
Pepper has long been believed to cause
sneezing; this is still believed true today. Some sources say that
piperine, a substance present in black pepper, irritates the nostrils, causing the sneezing; some say that it's just the effect of the fine dust in ground pepper, and some say that pepper isn't in fact a very effective sneeze-producer at all. Few if any controlled studies have been carried out to answer the question.
Pepper is eliminated from the diet of patients having abdominal surgery and ulcers because of its irritating effect upon the intestines, being replaced by what is referred to as a bland diet.
Pepper contains small amounts of
safrole, a mildly
carcinogenic compound.
It has been shown that piperine can dramatically increase absorption of
selenium,
vitamin B and
beta-carotene as well as other nutrients.
Flavour
Pepper gets its spicy heat mostly from the
piperine compound, which is found both in the outer fruit and in the seed. Refined piperine, milligram-for-milligram, is about one percent as hot as the
capsaicin in chile peppers. The outer fruit layer, left on black pepper, also contains important odour-contributing
terpenes including
pinene,
sabinene,
limonene,
caryophyllene, and
linalool, which give citrusy, woody, and floral notes. These scents are mostly missing in white pepper, which is stripped of the fruit layer. White pepper can gain some different odours (including musty notes) from its longer fermentation stage.
Pepper loses flavour and aroma through evaporation, so airtight storage helps preserve pepper's original spiciness longer. Pepper can also lose flavour when exposed to light, which can transform piperine into nearly tasteless
isochavicine. Once ground, pepper's aromatics can evaporate quickly; most culinary sources recommend grinding whole peppercorns immediately before use for this reason. Handheld pepper mills (or "pepper grinders"), which mechanically grind or crush whole peppercorns, are used for this, sometimes instead of pepper shakers, dispensers of pre-ground pepper. Spice mills such as pepper mills were found in European kitchens as early as the 14th century, but the
mortar and pestle used earlier for crushing pepper remained a popular method for centuries after as well.
World trade
Peppercorns are, by monetary value, the most widely traded spice in the world, accounting for 20 percent of all spice imports in 2002. The price of pepper can be volatile, and this figure fluctuates a great deal year to year; for example, pepper made up 39 percent of all spice imports in 1998. By weight, slightly more chilli peppers are traded worldwide than peppercorns. The
International Pepper Exchange is located in
Kochi, India.
Vietnam has recently become the world's largest producer and exporter of pepper (85,000
long tons in 2003). Other major producers include Indonesia (67,000 tons), India (65,000 tons),
Brazil (35,000 tons), Malaysia (22,000 tons), Sri Lanka (12,750 tons), Thailand, and China. Vietnam dominates the export market, using almost none of its production domestically. In 2003, Vietnam exported 82,000 tons of pepper, Indonesia 57,000 tons, Brazil 37,940 tons, Malaysia 18,500 tons, and India 17,200 tons.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Black Pepper'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://black_pepper.totallyexplained.com">Black pepper Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |