Research shows that hot herbs are good for
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ADDING ONIONS, garlic, and other spices to food
does a lot more than make meals taste better. Research shows that
the spicy cuisine of some cultures developed not because of taste
alone—rather, spices hold antibiotic properties that kill bacteria
that would otherwise contaminate food.
Garlic, onion, allspice, and oregano contain powerful
bacteria-fighting compounds and are the most powerful of the
antibiotic spices, according to researchers at Cornell University,
whose findings were published in the March 1998 Quarterly Review of
Biology. Those spices killed all thirty microorganisms they were
tested against, including E. coli and Salmonella, two bacteria that
cause food poisoning.
Further, the study found a direct link between a country’s
climate and the type and amount of spices used in cultural dishes.
The researchers theorized that spicy cuisine—which is usually
associated with warm-climate cultures and commonly contains high
amounts of garlic and onion—may be born of necessity: Food spoils
faster in warmer climates, and spices inhibit that.
The researchers noted that chiles and other hot peppers also are
common ingredients in dishes in warmer countries; they found that
capsicums, a name that refers to various pepper plants, kill up to
75 percent of bacteria in laboratory tests.
Spice use north to south
Paul Sherman, an evolutionary biologist and professor of
neurobiology and behavior at Cornell, and colleague Jennifer
Billing analyzed forty-three spices used in more than 4,500
traditional meat recipes from thirty-six countries. The spices
ranged from the relatively bland parsley and sage to the more
pungent bay leaves and mustard. Spices that don’t have strong
antibiotic power—those that kill only 25 percent of bacteria in
tests—include white and black pepper, ginger, aniseed, celery seed,
and the juice of lemon and lime, according to the study.
The researchers also analyzed spice use by individual countries
and found that hot spices were commonly used in the warmer climates
of Thailand and India, for example, but sparingly or not at all in
such cold-climate countries as Norway and Sweden.
In more than 80 percent of Indian recipes, onions, ginger,
capsicums, and garlic were used more than 76 percent of the time,
the researchers found. By contrast, Norwegian recipes called mostly
for black and white pepper, and spices were used in only half of
the seventy-seven Norwegian recipes studied. Onions were used in a
mere 20 percent of those recipes, and peppers weren’t included at
all.
The study showed a similar climate-spice correlation for the
United States, exemplified by the spicy Cajun food of Louisiana and
the blander meals of New England.