India
SEASONINGS
Indian cuisine has a sophisticated flavor-building logic, built on 4,000 years of philosophy. Spices serve as medicine, art, and spiritual practice together. Indian seasonings dance between bold and subtle, hot and cooling, earthy and tangy, always striving for balance, saatvik. Ayurveda recognizes six fundamental tastes that must be balanced in every meal: sweet (madhura), sour (amla), salty (lavana), pungent (katu), bitter (tikta), and astringent (kashaya). This balance is achieved with thali, a concept where one meal consists of multiple small dishes designed to complement each other’s flavors.
The combination of bitter, astringent, and pungent tastes – alongside sweet, sour, and salty – is a key reason why Indian food stands out globally and tastes so distinct.
Unlike Western cuisine’s complementary approach, Indian cooking deliberately contrasts flavors through spice combinations that create harmony through opposition. Take, for example, mango pickle, aam ka achaar. This pickle combines the intense sourness and astringency of raw mango with fiery chili powder, pungent mustard oil, and salt. The flavors oppose and intensify each other, yet after time spent melding, they balance and complement in the finished pickle.
Indian seasoning works in layers to introduce taste at every stage of the dish. You don’t just throw in cumin and call it a day. First to go is the tadka tempering, flavouring the oil with mustard seeds, cardamom pods, or fennel seeds. This technique creates a ‘continuous presence’ of multiple flavors throughout the cooking process. Later, mid-cooking spice additions develop complexity. Finishing touches provide brightness to dishes. You might add turmeric early to cook off its bitterness, but garam masala goes in last – aromatic and unboiled. Each step builds a scaffolding of flavor that lingers on the tongue in waves.
Masala simply means a spice mixture, which by no means is simple. It’s an umbrella for any combination of spices that can either be wet or dry. No two kitchens have the same masala. Even salt is added at a specific stage to bind flavor. Garam Masala literally means ‘warm spice blend’. This blend creates what’s called a ‘warming’ effect – not heat like chili peppers, but a sense of internal warmth. Core components of garam masala are cinnamon, green/black cardamom, cloves, nutmeg, black pepper, and cumin. Many recipes also include bay leaves, mace, coriander, star anise, and fennel seeds. Again, the variations are endless.
Masala dabba is a popular spice storage container used in local kitchens. It has a number of small cups, often seven, placed inside a round or square box, filled with:
ASAFOEDITA. Provides umami depth – its pungent raw smell transforms into musky complexity when heated in oil.
TURMERIC POWDER. Golden color, anti-inflammatory benefits, peppery-woody taste.
CUMIN SEEDS. Nutty, earthy warmth, essential for tempering and ground spice blends.
BLACK MUSTARD SEEDS. Characteristic popping sound and nutty flavor.
CHILI POWDER. Color and mild heat.
CORIANDER. Citrusy, earthy notes.
GARAM MASALA completes the essential seven.
Beyond the masala dabba, whole spices provide complexity impossible to achieve with ground varieties. Green cardamom offers sweet, eucalyptus notes, black cardamom’s fire-drying creates intense smokiness; cinnamon bark, cloves, and black peppercorns form the foundation of most garam masala blends.
SAUCES
In Indian cooking, curry refers to a dish with a sauce or gravy. Curry is not a curry because it contains a particular blend of spices known as curry powder. This spice blend is not even originally Indian – it originated with British soldiers attempting to recreate Indian dishes. Foundational sauces and chutneys of Indian cuisine are:
ONION-TOMATO MASALA – onion, tomato, ginger, garlic, spices – foundation for many Northern gravies.
COCONUT-BASED CURRY – coconut milk or paste with spices, South Indian, and coastal dishes.
YOGURT-BASED SAUCE – for marinades (e.g., tandoori), gravies, and as a side dish (raita), it adds tang, richness, and helps calm the heat in spicy dishes.
TAMARIND SAUCE – tamarind, jaggery (or sugar), spices, a tangy-sweet-sour chutney for street food snacks.
GREEN CHUTNEY – cilantro, mint, green chili, lemon or lime, spices – fresh, spicy, herbaceous.
SPICED GHEE TARKA – hot, spiced ghee poured over dals and sabzis, infused with asafoetida, cumin, garlic, chili.
China
Across many Chinese traditions, flavor is built by layering fresh aromatics (ginger, scallion, garlic), liquid seasonings (light/dark soy, Shaoxing wine, vinegar), condiments (oyster sauce, fermented black beans, chili oils/pastes), and stocks. Dry spices are used more sparingly, in more specific roles than in Indian or North African styles. That said, several Chinese regions and formats do lean on dry spices, like Sichuan or Hunan.
Distinct regional seasoning patterns stand out. Sichuan uses lots of chili peppers, doubanjiang (fermented chili bean paste), and Sichuan peppercorn, creating the signature mala – numbing and hot – profile. Hunan cuisine favors fresh chili, garlic, and vinegar for sharper, cleaner heat. Cantonese cooking keeps flavors lighter, using oyster sauce, soy, and ginger to highlight freshness. Northern regions use more garlic, leeks, and soy paste, while eastern cuisines, like Jiangsu and Zhejiang, balance sweet and savory through rice wine and mild vinegar.
Dry spices are used selectively. Star anise, cinnamon, cloves, fennel seeds, and Sichuan peppercorn form the well-known five-spice blend, common in braises. Other additions, such as white pepper, dried tangerine peel, and sand ginger, appear in regional marinades or stocks.
China developed one of the world’s most sophisticated fermentation traditions, using grains, beans, and vegetables; all these products contribute much to flavor building: soy sauce, vinegar, rice wine, bean pastes, and fermented tofu. These form the core of seasoning in Chinese cooking, similar to how olive oil structures Mediterranean cuisines. The scale and variety of Chinese fermentation — combining molds, yeasts, and bacteria — have no close equivalent elsewhere.
SPICE MIXES
CHINESE FIVE-SPICE POWDER – the most famous blend, combining star anise, cassia (Chinese cinnamon), cloves, fennel seeds, and Sichuan peppercorn. It’s used in marinades, braised meats, and roasts to add warmth and fragrance. Ratios vary by region, but the idea is to capture a full range of aromatic notes—sweet, bitter, sour, salty, and pungent.
THIRTEEN-SPICE POWDER– a more elaborate northern blend, especially used in Henan cooking. It includes the five-spice base plus additions like galangal, dried ginger, nutmeg, cardamom, and black pepper, giving a stronger, more layered aroma. It’s often used for braised meats and street foods like spiced duck necks.
GROUND SICHUAN PEPPER AND CHILI MIX – common in Sichuan cuisine, used as a dry sprinkle (mala seasoning) for noodles, grilled meats, or hot pot dipping.
Apart from these, most Chinese kitchens rely more on fresh aromatics and fermented sauces than on powdered spice blends.
SAUCES
LIGHT SOY SAUCE – thin, salty, and used mainly for seasoning, marinades, and dipping sauces. It provides the primary salty flavor.
DARK SOY SAUCE – thick, dark, and slightly sweet, used to add color and a deeper taste to braised dishes and stews.
OYSTER SAUCE – invented in Guangdong, thick and savory, used to enrich stir-fries and vegetables.
HOISIN SAUCE – sweet, salty, and fermented; used as a glaze, dip, or ingredient in dishes like Peking duck.
DOUBANJIANG – a Sichuan staple seasoning paste, made from fermented broad beans, chili and wheat, aged for months until it develops a deep, intensely savory, smoky taste. Used in spicy dishes such as mapo tofu or twice-cooked pork.
BLACK BEAN SAUCE – made from fermented black soybeans, lending strong, salty depth to meat and seafood dishes. Common in Cantonese and Sichuan cooking
SESAME OIL – brings a nutty aroma and richness, common in noodle dishes and dressings.
SHAOXING RICE WINE – a cooking wine from Zhejiang, used to enhance aroma and remove meat or fish odors.