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Home > Types of Spices > Barks
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| Bark type Spices
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Some spices constitute the bark of a plant. These barks are highly flavoured and impart taste to a certain food item. Some very common spices that are barks of plants are:
Cassia (Jangli Dalchini) and Cinnamon (Dalchini or Darchini) are very popular spices commonly used in the Indian dietary. The term Darchini that has come to stay in Indian parlance is actually a derivation from the Arabian term Dar-al-chini, meaning the wood (or bark) of China, one of the oldest and largest producers of China Cassia so well known in commerce. Several reports indicate that cinnamon is one of the oldest spices known to mankind. Records show that Egyptians knew it even 2000 years before Christ!
Trees growing at higher altitudes (180 to 300 meters) yield better quality bark with higher volatile oil content. Trees growing at lower altitudes (90 to 150 meters) yield a relatively thick, coarse bark, somewhat deficient in flavor, containing 1.0 to 1.2 % of volatile oil.
The best bark of Batavia Casia comes from the trunk; the bigger the trunk the thicker and more valuable the bark. The dried quills are sorted and graded according to length, color, thickness and aroma and packed accordingly and then marketed.
Saigon Cassia is one of the important cassias in international trade.
The best and the most expensive bark `Que-thanh` or Royal cinnamon comes from the province of Thanh-hoa in North Annam. Barking, that is removal of bark, is usually carried on the standing tree, starting with the main branches and working down the trunk, not by climbing but by erecting bamboo scaffolding around it. A string is tied round the trunk and main branches at intervals of 40 cm and the bark is cut through at these points with a sharp pointed knife. Then vertical cuts are made between the horizontal incisions at intervals of 25 to 35 cm and the slabs of barks are eased off with the aid of thin spatulas made of bamboo or buffalo horn. Each ring of bark is removed in this way until the bottom of the trunk is reached; the tree is then felled after which small branches and twigs are harvested.
Cinnamon is one of the most important tree spices of India. Like its cousin cassia, cinnamon consists of layers of dried pieces of the inner bark of branches and young shoots from the evergreen tree Cinnamomum zeylanicum which is obtained when the cork and the cortical parenchyma are removed from the whole bark. The thickness of the bark ranges from 0.2 to 1.0 mm. Pure cinnamon is free from any admixture with cassia, which is considered inferior to the former in appearance, flavor and odor.
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