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17 December 2006

An ode to zingerone

Ginger. Where else would you find a flavour so common-place and familiar, so comfortingly domestic: our house filled with the tempting scent of my mother’s ginger snaps cooling in the kitchen; the deceptively light ginger beer we used to make during the summer school holidays; Mrs SJE de Villiers’s ginger waffles. Ginger. Where else would you find a flavour so exotically tropical, so wonderfully dangerous, so intertwined with tales of adventure in foreign climes, with the enigmatic history of the Spice Route? Thai curry is nothing without the tang of freshly grated ginger, sushi is just fish pressed between some rice without the delightful pink arrangement of amazu shoga to cleanse and refresh the palate in between bites.

Oh, how I long for a colonial home: trade winds kicking up sand outside the screen doors, the texture of damask table linen, ceiling fans uselessly circulating the oppressive heat, the sound of singing coming from the plantation and Ceylon tea served at exactly four o’clock in fine white china with – best of all – some golden pieces of crystallized ginger! Ginger. The essence of contradiction. A taste of latent ruin.

Ginger is the rhizome of Zingiber officinale. The word ‘ginger’ is derived from the Sanskrit word shringavera, which means ‘shaped like a deer’s antlers’. The Zingiberaceae family possesses other culinary delights: Curcuma longa is a closely related plant and the source of the spice turmeric. The hot, pungent molecule in ginger is called zingerone. A name suited to a forbidden aphrodisiac. Chemically, it looks a lot like capsaicin, the hot molecule found in chillies, but lacks the long hydrocarbon tail and a nitrogen atom. It fits pain receptors on the tongue. A sting of pleasure. The ginger rhizome holds a complex variety of related compounds, all differing just slightly from zingerone in the length of the chain replacing one of the hydrogen atoms of the terminal methyl group. The exact blend of this intricate set of aromatics depends on nutrients in the soil, the temperature, the availability of light and a myriad of other growing conditions, making each piece of ginger totally unique.


Common ginger has small white and maroon flowers, but many of the other 60 Zingiber species and many related plants in the Zingiberaceae family have curiously beautiful, sometimes almost orchid-like blossoms: check out Zingiber spectabile, Roscoea purpurea, Costus pulverulentus, Etlingera eliator, and Hedychium coccineum at your nearest tropical conservatory. I never cease to be inspired and enchanted by the versatility of ginger. Here are two very easy recipes I’ve come across in my infatuation with ginger, my zingerone addiction.

Gingered watermelon juice
500 g watermelon, peeled, de-seeded and roughly chopped
2 tsp ginger, freshly grated
Process ingredients in a blender or food processor for 2 minutes. Add 6 ice cubes and process until ice is crushed. Serve garnished with a thin wedge of watermelon.

Gingery lemon muffins
1/4 cup maragrine, room temperature
1/4 cup sugar
1 egg
2 tbsp ginger, peeled and coarsely chopped
2 tbsp grated lemon zest
1 tsp baking soda
1 1/2 cups plain, low-fat yoghurt or buttermilk
2 cups plain flour
Cream together margarine and sugar in a large bowl. Beat in egg. Add ginger and lemon zest. In a separate small bowl, stir baking soda into buttermilk; it will start to bubble and rise. Fold flour into ginger mixture one third at a time, alternating with buttermilk. When well blended, spoon into greased muffin pans. Bake in a preheated 190°C oven for 15-20 minutes, or until lightly browned.

8 comments:

twanji said...

I must confess that I am not much of a ginger fan, however I do enjoy it on occasion. You really must consider writing a Joanna Lindsey-esque novel. Your little ode to ginger actually has me craving the stuff - that's power!

I probably won't try the juice, but the muffins sound festive. Let's just hope they work out.

Anonymous said...

Are you gay or straight?
just interested. please dont take offense.

Adam said...

Sjoe, Curious, jy's da'em baie voor op die wa?!

Wat ek eintlik wil sĂȘ is dat ek 'n sucker is vir gemmerkoekies. My ma het blykbaar tydens haar swangerskap met my gethrive op gemmerkoekies - en dit is ons nie-wetenskaplike verklaring vir my affiniteit met die harde donkerbruin koekies.

Gemmerbier sal ook altyd op my lysie van soulfood wees. Spesifiek tannie Helene se resep, wat nog wynsteensuur en kremetart in kry. Spyt is ek nou ons het nie vanjaar 'n batch aanmekaar geslaan nie...

Triggermap said...

Dude, I think you're being internet stalked, lol.

Btw, happy xmas, new year and all that.

Trundling Grunt said...

I love ginger - I also love the fact that it is so unprepossessing and yet the smell when you cut or grate it is sublime. Sadly I'm the only one in my family who really gets it so it's a solitary vice. Great post - thank you for that.

Unknown said...

twanji:
Aww, man, Ms. Lindsey, huh? Doesn't she write bodice-ripping romance novels? How gauche.

curious:
Yes.

adam:
Ten minste was haar craving vir iets wat as eetbaar geklassifiseer kan word, en nie modder of sement nie!

triggermap:
Best of the festive season to you, too. 2007's gonna be a good one, I think.

trundling grunt:
I like the fact that you can instantly identify it as such - an intoxicating combination of naughty and nice. I would consider it an acquired taste, for sure; like all sophisticated and delicate comestibles, including olives and scary cheeses!

Anonymous said...

I thought so.

twanji said...

HA HA!
No seriously, it was a compliment!