Online Encyclopedia

CARDAMOM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 314 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CARDAMOM  , the

fruit of several
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plants of the genera Elettaria and Amomum, belonging to the natural order Zingiberaceae, the
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principal of which is Elettaria Cardamomum, from which the true
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officinal or
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Malabar cardamom is derived . The Malabar cardamom plant is a large perennial herb with a thick fleshy root-stock, which sends up flowering stems, 6 to 12 ft. high . The large leaves are arranged in two rows, have very long sheaths enveloping the stem and a lanceolate spreading blade i to 22 ft. long . The fruit is an ovate-triangular, three-celled, three-valved capsule (about i in. long, of a dirty yellow colour) enclosing numerous angular seeds, which form the valuable
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part of the plant . It is a native of the mountainous parts of the Malabar coast of India, and the fruits are procured either from wild plants or by cultivation throughout
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Travancore, western
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Mysore, and along the western Ghauts . A cardamom of much larger
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size found growing in
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Ceylon was formerly regarded as belonging to a distinct
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species, and described as such under the name of Elettaria major; but it is now known to be only a variety of the Malabar cardamom . In commerce, several varieties are distinguished according to their size and flavour . The most esteemed are known as " shorts," a name given to such capsules as are from a quarter to
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half an inch long and about a quarter broad . Following these come " short-longs " and " long-longs," also distinguished by their size, the largest reaching to about an inch in length . The Ceylon cardamom attains a length of an inch and a half and is about a third of an inch broad, with a brownish pericarp and a distinct aromatic odour . Among the other plants, the fruits of which pass in commerce as cardamoms, are the round or cluster cardamom, Amomum Cardamomum, a native of Siam and
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Java; the bastard cardamom of Siam, A. xanthioides—the Bengal cardamom, which is the fruit of A. subulatum, a native of
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Nepal; the Java cardamom, produced by A. maximum; and the Korarima cardamom of
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Somaliland . The last-named is the product of a plant which is unknown botanically .

Cardamoms generally are possessed of a pleasant aromatic odour, and an agreeable, spicy

taste . On account of their flavour they are much used with other medicines, and they form a principal ingredient in curries and compounded spices . In the north of
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Europe they are much used as a spice and flavouring material for cakes and
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liqueurs; and they are very extensively employed in the East for chewing with betel, &c .

End of Article: CARDAMOM
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