ProphetesAI is thinking...
Guinea pepper
Answers
MindMap
Loading...
Sources
Guinea pepper
land, fom wisa, and (ambiguously) Guinea pepper
Grains of Selim, also known as Kani pepper, Senegal pepper, Ethiopian pepper, Moor pepper, Negro pepper family (Piperaceae), also known as West African pepper, Ashanti pepper, Benin pepper, false cubeb, Guinea cubeb, kale, kukauabe, masoro, sasema, soro
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Guinea pepper
Guinea pepper a. An early name for Cayenne pepper. b. (See quot. 1839.)1597 Gerarde Herbal ii. lxvi. 293 Guinie pepper hath the taste of pepper, but not the power or vertue. 1620 Melton Astrolog. 40 Hee flung Ginny-Pepper in the Hangmans eyes as he came to put the noose ouer his necke. 1626 Bacon Sy...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Piper guineense
cubeb, Guinea cubeb, and called locally kale, kukauabe, masoro, etiñkeni, sasema, soro wisa, eyendo, eshasha by the Urhobo people, and oziza and uziza The terms West African pepper and Guinea pepper have also been used, but are ambiguous and may refer to grains of Selim or grains of paradise.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
pepperina
pepperina Austral. (ˌpɛpəˈriːnə) [f. pepper-tree + -ina, as in casuarina.] = pepper-tree. Also attrib.1930 V. Palmer Men are Human xviii. 166 Nothing grew save the drooping pepperina that trailed its sheeny leaves over the kitchen roof. 1941 Coast to Coast 145 There was a pepperina-tree in the corne...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
African pepper
) from the ginger family (Zingiberaceae), also known as melegueta pepper, alligator pepper, Guinea grains, ossame, fom wisa, and (ambiguously) Guinea pepper , Senegal pepper, Ethiopian pepper, Moor pepper, Negro pepper, , , , , , , kimba, kili, and (ambiguously) Guinea pepper
Xylopia quintasii, a closely related
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
C17H26O3
C17H26O3 (molar mass :278.39 g/mol) may refer to :
Panaxytriol, a fatty alcohol found in ginseng
Paradol, the active flavor constituent of the seeds of Guinea pepper
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
malaguetta
malaguetta (mæləˈgɛtə) Forms: 6 manguetta, manegete, 7 mellegette, 7–8 malegutta, 8 malaget, malaghetta, malagato, malegetta, 8–9 malaguette, 9 maniguette, malaguet(a, meleguet(t)a, 7– malaguetta. [Of obscure origin. App. identical with the med.L. melegeta, the name of a spice mentioned c 1214 in co...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
Malagueta pepper
It got its name from the unrelated melegueta pepper, an African spice from Guinea which is a member of the ginger family. At the time of Columbus's arrival in the New World, the Portuguese traded from the Gulf of Guinea a very popular African spice as a substitute for the
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Guinea (region)
in the waters off Elmina, for the hegemony of the Guinea trade (gold, ivory and black pepper). )
Guinea (formerly French Guinea)
Sierra Leone (British part of the Pepper Coast, originally Province of Freedom)
Liberia (from U.S. settlements for
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Fernão Gomes
He also received a monopoly of trade in guinea pepper for another yearly payment of 100,000 reais
(then called "malagueta", it was a popular substitute for black pepper).
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Paradol
Paradol is the active flavor constituent of the seeds of Guinea pepper (Aframomum melegueta or grains of paradise). It is also found in ginger.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
International Pepper Community
The International Pepper Community (IPC) is an intergovernmental organisation of pepper or peppercorn producing countries. Papua New Guinea and Philippines have not ratified the Agreement but have been admitted to the IPC as an associate member.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Piper mestonii
Piper mestonii, commonly known as Queensland long pepper or simply long pepper, is an evergreen vine in the pepper family Piperaceae native to rainforests of New Guinea and Queensland, Australia.
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
Grains of paradise
It is also known as melegueta pepper, Guinea grains, ossame, or fom wisa, and is sometimes confused with alligator pepper. The terms African pepper and Guinea pepper have also been used, but are ambiguous as they can apply to other spices such as grains of Selim (Xylopia aethiopica
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org