Showing all 9 results
Citric Acid
$40.00This concentrated powder with its sour flavor can be added to baking soda in cakes and biscuits to increase leavening, used as a replacement for acids, or used in place of salt in sour bread recipes.
Dill Seed
$8.00 – $10.00In Old Norse, the word dill means “to lull” – it was mixed with water to help babies sleep. Egyptians believed burying dill with their dead would protect them in the afterlife against hunger.
Although Dill has a unique and powerful flavor, it pairs well with a wide variety of foods including poultry, fish, salads, sauces, dips, starches, and vegetables.
Kombu
$9.00 – $40.00Edible kelp used in Japanese cuisine to make dashi and for seasoning sushi rice rice. It adds an umami flavor to your cooking. Our Kombu is wild harvested off the coast of Maine.
Lemon Peel
$10.25 – $20.00For more than 2,000 years, the use of lemons has been celebrated. In the fifteen century, royal ladies of the French court added color to their lips by biting into the fruit.
Lemon Peel granules add a bright citrus flavor to recipes. Use in baked goods, marinades, salads, and meat and fish rubs.
Mustard, Black & Yellow Seeds ~ 1.5 Cups Each
$25.00Mustard seeds release their heat when soaked in a non-acidic liquid. To begin developing heat, soak the seeds in water; to stop it, add an acidic liquid such as vinegar, lemon juice, or wine. Use for making mustartds, pickling, in canning recipes and in sausages. Add to sauces, rubs, and marinades for grilling. Pairs well with other strong spice flavors, such as garlic and chili peppers. Black Mustard, though very similar to Brown Mustard, comes from a different plant — the Brassica Nigra. The seeds are very flavorful, but have almost no aroma. Black Mustard is thought to be the seed of which Jesus spoke.
This item contains two bags (~1.5 cups each) of mustard seeds, one black and one yellow, priced as overstock.
Check out our recipe for making mustards.
Mustard, Yellow
$8.00 – $30.00Mustard seeds release their heat when soaked in a non-acidic liquid. To begin developing heat, soak the seeds in water; to stop it, add an acidic liquid such as vinegar, lemon juice, or wine. Use for pickling, in canning recipes and in sausages. Add to sauces, rubs, and marinades for grilling. Pairs well with other strong spice flavors, such as garlic and chili peppers.
Jeremiah Colman was appointed as mustard-maker to Queen Victoria in 1866. He was skilled at grinding mustard seeds into powder without releasing the oils which when evaporated cause the mustard flavor to fade away. Add some heat to your dish with Yellow Mustard’s peppery flavor. Mix powdered Mustard with vinegar and water for a quick and easy condiment or marinade.
Onion
$7.50 – $24.00In virtually every cuisine since prehistoric times, onions were first depicted circa 3200 BCE in ancient Egypt. They show up in ancient art, tomb paintings, and written documents, and were exalted in the U.S. as George Washington’s favorite vegetable.
Complement savory dishes with the onion’s sweet and salty flavor. Add to soups, sauces, stews, casseroles, meatloaf, relishes, and stuffing.
Peppercorn, Black
$9.00 – $25.00Exceptional for blending & as a complement to meats & veggies.
Black Peppercorn – Our “house” variety of peppercorn and finely milled pepper
▪ Grown Certified Organic in Quang Tri Province, Vietnam
▪ Farmed in acidic volcanic soils, high temperatures, and a scarcity of rain
▪ Ripened on the vine for up to six weeks longer than other regions in Vietnam
▪ High heat peppercorns with intense and complex umami flavor and floral aromatics
Our “house” coarsly-milled peppercorn is from India’s Malabar coast and has similar tasting notes.








