This installment of our On the Spice Trail series might be subtitled: “Spices You Must Grind or Shave But Mustn’t Bite.” We bring you the inside story of two (and a half) wonderful, but lesser-known (at least in Western waters) spices that have medicinal as well as gustatory benefits. Both grow on trees, but while the clove is actually the flower of an evergreen tree, nutmegs are seeds (while the “half,” mace, comes from the outer coating of a nutmeg seed).
But what exactly is nutmeg? In nutmeg we actually have a two-for-one spice combo, both inside the fruit of the nutmeg tree: the red, web-like covering of the seed (technically called the aril) is dried and ground for the spice called mace. The hard seed itself, dried and then ground or shaved with a Microplane, becomes the spice nutmeg, to be used in cooking. The common nutmeg tree is indigenous to the Banda Islands, off of Indonesia, but has been cultivated throughout Southeast Asia for centuries, and other varietals exist elsewhere, in New Guinea and India, for example. But it is to the Indonesians that we must tip our hats, as even 17th century botanists, like Hendrik van Rheede, recorded that India was introduced to nutmeg by Indonesian traders.
Eating Nutmeg and Mace
For cooking purposes, Mace and Nutmeg are largely interchangeable, the difference in their taste very subtle: mace is a bit lighter, nutmeg somewhat sweeter. The decision about which to include in a recipe often comes down to aesthetics—mace turns dishes a soft saffron orange, whereas nutmeg is brown but has little effect on coloring. You’d be right to wonder about the nutmeg fruit, about which we hear very little. It does have some uses, for instance the chopped-up rind appears in one of the world’s weirdest desserts, ais kacang. This is sort of like an ice cream sundae, but one that flew in from another planet, and is not to everyone’s taste.