Making Your Own Garam Masala

One of the things that I really like about Indian food is the immense variety of flavors.  When making some dishes, a key ingredient is garam masala, or hot spice, where hot refers to high temperature.  Of course most garam masala recipes I’ve tried tend to have a nice spicy-hot flavor, which is why whe I cook with it I don’t use as much a recipe indicates. 

This garam masala recipe is one that I find easy to make and very flavorful.  And while it might seem a lot of work to make what appears to be a small amount, a little goes a long way.  So here is the recipe from my recipe archives.  While I find recipes online and in books, I tend to play around with them and try to add my own touch to them.

Garam masala is a mix of spices whose prime ingredient is cinnamon and is used to flavor a lot of vegetable curries.

  1. 3� cinnamon stick
  2. ¼ cup coriander seeds
  3. 2 tablespoons cumin seeds
  4. teaspoon black pepper corns
  5. 4 to 6 cloves
  6. 1 to 2 bay leaves
  7. 3 to 4 star anise pods (optional)

Toast all ingredients in a small skillet over medium-low heat for several minutes until mix becomes fragrant and seeds turn several shades darker, but not burnt (try doing this at first on a small amount so you get the hang of it).

Grind in spice mill or coffee grinder (note that once you mix spices in a coffee grinder once, never again use it for coffee—I have several coffee grinders, one for coffee the other for spice mixes).  Store the spice mix in an air-tight container in the fridge for a month or place in freezer for up to a year.

Enhanced by Zemanta