Berbere

Berbere

Berbere is the cornerstone of Ethiopian cuisine, a powerfully hot and complex spice blend that's both a condiment and a cooking base. Unlike other chilli-forward blends, Berbere combines dried chillies with cardamom, cloves, and ajowan to create heat with sophistication. The blend is intensely aromatic and demands respect; a little goes a long way. This is a blend for stews and braises that simmer for hours, allowing the spices to develop depth and integrate with other ingredients.

Spices 25 minutes Serves50-60
Chinese Pickled Cucumber

Chinese Pickled Cucumber

Cucumbers are cut into spears (or smashed-and-torn for a rougher texture), salted heavily in a colander 30 minutes to weep, then patted dry. A brine of rice vinegar, sugar, light soy, water, sliced ginger, Sichuan peppercorns and dried red chillies brings to a gentle simmer just to dissolve the sugar; cools to room temperature. The drained cucumber goes into a jar; the cooled brine pours over to submerge; refrigerated for 1 hour minimum (overnight ideal). Eats cold straight from the jar.

Sides 15 minutes Serves6
Classic Curry Powder

Classic Curry Powder

Classic curry powder is the traditional base for British-Indian cooking. Unlike specialized blends like garam masala (finishing) or tandoori (marinading), this powder is the workhorse, the foundation you fry with onions and aromatics to build a curry sauce. It's warm rather than fiery, aromatic rather than one-note. The blend of coriander, cumin, and turmeric is immediately recognizable; this is the curry your grandmother likely made.

Curry Powder 10 minutes Serves115
Jamaican Jerk Marinade

Jamaican Jerk Marinade

Jamaican jerk marinade represents Caribbean outdoor cooking at its finest: a balance of heat, warmth, umami, and rum-soaked flavor. Unlike quick marinades, this is a stiff paste where cooked onions carry the flavor. The technique of cooking onions, chillies, ginger, and spices together in oil creates a darker, deeper marinade than quick acid-based versions. The rum adds caramel notes and complexity. This paste clings to meat during the slow grill, developing a spiced crust while the interior stays moist. The 8-hour resting period is essential, the spice oils penetrate deeply, infusing every fiber of the meat. This is cooking for patience and reward.

Marinade 24 minutes Serves200-250
Kung Pao Shrimp

Kung Pao Shrimp

Kung pao (gongbao) shrimp is the seafood cousin of the classic Sichuan gongbao jiding, named for the 19th-century governor-general Ding Baozhen whose title was Gong Bao. Where the chicken version uses diced meat, the shrimp version keeps the prawns whole or halved so they curl into bright pink commas around the chillies and peanuts. The flavour profile is the signature Sichuan "lychee" balance: a touch of sweetness from sugar, sourness from black vinegar, salt and umami from soy, and the warm tingle (ma la) of toasted Sichuan peppercorn paired with the smoky bite of dried er jing tiao chillies. This is a fast dish, fundamentally a wok exercise: every ingredient must be prepped and lined up before the heat goes on, because once the chillies hit the oil you have maybe ninety seconds before everything is overcooked. Difficulty is moderate for a home cook with a working wok and high burner; the trick is keeping the chillies dark red and fragrant without scorching them black, and pulling the shrimp out the moment they curl. Served over plain rice it is one of the most rewarding ten-minute meals in the repertoire.

Chinese 28 minutes Serves3-4
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