| Myristica
fragrans Houtt.
Family :
Myristicaceae
DescriptionNutmeg
is the seed of an apricot-like fruit of
the nutmeg tree and mace is its arillus,
a thin leathery tissue between the stone
and the pulp. Both spices are strongly aromatic,
resinous and warm in taste. Mace is generally
said to have a finer aroma than nutmeg,
but the difference is small. Nutmeg quickly
loses its fragrace when ground. Naturally,
nutmeg is limited to the Banda Islands,
a tiny archipelago in Eastern Indonesia
(Moluccas). Main producing countries today
are Indonesia (East Indian Nutmeg) and Grenada
(West Indian Nutmeg); the latter is regarded
as inferior. In many European countries,
the name of nutmeg derives from Latin nux
muscatus "musky nut; moschate nut"; the
Middle English form is notemugge. Mace goes
back to Greek makir, which was used to denote
an oriental spice, though it is not clear
whether this was identical to mace.
These spices
have been appreciated since Roman times.
Because of its very limited geographical
distribution, nutmeg and mace became known
in Europe comparatively late (11th century).
Although nutmeg was available in Europe
since the 13th century, significant trade
started not before the 16.th century, when
Portuguese ships sailed to India and further,
to the famed spice islands (Moluccas). During
the 17th century, the Dutch succeeded in
monopolizing the nutmeg trade, as they did
with cloves. This situation changed only
in the 18.th century, when the Frenchman
Pierre Poivre succeeded in smuggling nutmeg
trees from the Bandas to Mauritius and thereby
broke the Dutch monopoly. The British East
India Company introduced this tree to Penang,
Singapore, India, Sri Lanka and the West
Indies.
Botany
The nutmeg tree
is a large evergreen native to the Banda
Islands in the Moluccas and grows to a height
of about 18 m. It produces fruits fifteen
to twenty years after planting. The fruit
of nutmeg tree, which is similar in colour
and size to apricot, splits when ripe revealing
the brilliant red arils encasing the brown
nut. The red arils on drying become orange
in colour and are the mace of commerce.
The nut is also dried until the kernel inside
rattles.
Nutmeg contains
about 10% essential oil, which is mostly
composed of terpene hydrocarbons (pinenes,
camphene, p-cymene, sabinene, phellandrene,
terpinene, limonene, myrcene, together 60
to 90%), terpene derivatives (linalool,
geraniol, terpineol, together 5 to 15%)
and phenylpropanes (myristicine, elemicine,
safrol, together 2 to 20%). Of the latter
group, myristicine (methoxy-safrol) is responsible
for the hallucinogenic effect of large nutmeg
dosages (typically, one or more nuts). Oil
of mace (up to 12% in the spice) contains
the same aroma components in slightly different
amounts.
Aroma and
flavour
Mace is used
to flavour milk-based sauces and is widely
used in processed meats. It is also added
sparingly to delicate soups and sauces with
fish or seafood. Pickles or chutneys may
be seasoned with mace. Nutmeg is a traditional
flavouring for cakes, gingerbreads, biscuits
and fruit or milk puddings. Today, nutmeg's
popularity has shrunken and the spice is
less used, still most in Arab countries,
Iran and Northern India, where both nutmeg
and mace appear in delicately-flavoured
meat dishes.
Culinary use
In Western cuisine,
nutmeg and mace are more popular for cakes,
crackers and stewed fruits; nutmeg is sometimes
used to flavour cheese. The combination
of spinach with nutmeg is somewhat a classic,
especially for Italian stuffed noodles.
The greatest lovers of nutmeg in today's
Europe, though, are the Dutch. They use
it for cabbage, potato and other vegetables,
but also for meat, soups, stews and sauces.
Since quite a large fraction of nutmeg is
today grown in Grenada, nutmeg has entered
several Caribbean cuisines. In Grenada,
it's omnipresent, the locals even eating
nutmeg-flavoured ice cream! Nutmeg is an
optional ingredient in a famous Caribbean
spice paste, Jamaican jerk.
Medicinal
and other use
In Indonesia,
the (woody and very sour) pulp is used to
make a delicious jam with fine nutmeg aroma.
In Malaysia the fleshy outer husk is crystallized
or pickled and then sold as a delicious
snack.Nutmeg is a narcotic in excess quantities.
It is astringent, a stimulant and an aphrodisiac.
Nutmeg oil is used in perfumes and ointments.
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