Paprika

A small bowl of hot smoked Spanish paprika

Paprika is a spice made from the grinding of dried sweet red or green bell peppers (Capsicum annuum). In many European countries, the word paprika also refers to bell peppers themselves. The seasoning is used in many cuisines to add colour and flavour to dishes.

Contents

History

Red paprika originated in Southern Mexico, Central America, and the Antilles Islands, where Native Americans used it for healing and seasoning. Christopher Columbus returned from the New World with unknown spices and a never-before-seen present: a paprika plant. At first, the plants were used to decorate baroque gardens of nobility in Europe. The plant also arrived in Turkey via trade routes.

From there it came to Hungary through the Balkans. By the second half of the 16th century, a Hungarian noblewoman named Margit Széchy had a plant in her garden called the Turkish pepper (at that time also called Indian pepper or heathen pepper). The name 'paprika' came from the 18th century as a diminutive form for the serbian name of pepper (papar), then after the Hungarian usage, the word became international and universal. The first note mentioning red pepper in Szeged dates back to 1748; the word paprika was used in an account book.

In Hungary, paprika was first used as a cure for intermittent fever; it later became a typical spice of Hungarian cooking.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the English word comes from the Hungarian "paprika," which means 'pepper' (the red spice or the vegetable). This derives from the Serbian "paprena" that means "the one that is hot" and it is derived from Serbian and Croatian noun papar, "pepper", which in turn was borrowed from the Latin "piper", for "pepper."

Usage

Capsicum fruit which comes in various shapes and colors can be used to make paprika.

Paprika is used as an ingredient in a broad variety of dishes throughout the world. Paprika (pimentón in Spain, colorau in Portugal, chiltoma in Nicaragua, but these "paprikas" are not made exclusively from bell peppers, other varieties are used, and there are several hot and sweet "paprikas") is principally used to season and colour rices, stews, and soups, such as goulash. In Spain, Slovenia, Germany, Hungary, Slovakia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia, Austria, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey and Portugal, paprika is also used in the preparation of sausages as an ingredient that is mixed with meats and other spices. Paprika may be smoked for additional flavours,or tastes.

Production

In Poland, cans with Paprykarz szczeciński are made by many seafood producers, of steamed sea fish, rice, paprika, and onion.

In India, a similar powdered spice comes from a fruit locally called 'deghi mirchi', which is grown widely and takes on a slightly different flavour, depending on local soil and climatic conditions.

The hottest paprikas are not the bright red ones, but rather the palest red and light brown coloured ones.

Types of Hungarian paprika (Hungarian name in parentheses):

Hungarian paprika is mainly made in the cities of Kalocsa and Szeged, both areas in the southern part of Hungary.

In Hungarian and some other languages, such as Dutch, German, Polish, Japanese and Korean, the word "paprika" is used for the fruits, the bell pepper or hot pepper too, of which the spices are made.

India leads in production of dry chillies and peppers followed by China and Bangladesh.

Top Ten chillies and peppers(dry) Producers — 11 June 2008
Country Production (Tonnes) Footnote
Flag of India.svg India 753000 F
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg People's Republic of China 250000 F
Flag of Bangladesh.svg Bangladesh 170000 F
Flag of Peru.svg Peru 165000 F
Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan 130000 *
Flag of Ethiopia.svg Ethiopia 115000 F
Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana 81000 F
Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam 78500 F
Flag of Myanmar.svg Myanmar 71000 F
Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico 60000 F
Newworldmap.svg World 2348370 A
No symbol = official figure, P = official figure, F = FAO estimate, * = Unofficial/Semi-official/mirror data, C = Calculated figure A = Aggregate(may include official, semi-official or estimates);

Source: Food And Agricultural Organization of United Nations: Economic And Social Department: The Statistical Devision


Health benefits

Paprika is unusually high in vitamin C. Hungary's 1937 Nobel prize-winning Albert Szent-Györgyi first discovered this fact [1] in 1932. (Before that, vitamin C could be obtained in only very low quantities by scientists.) The capsicum peppers used for paprika contain six to nine times as much vitamin C as tomatoes by weight. [2]

High heat leaches the vitamins from peppers, thus commercially-dried peppers are not as nutritious as those dried naturally in the sun.

See also

References

  1. the vitamin in paprika peppers
  2. Nutrition Facts Comparison of Paprika and Tomatoes[1]

External links