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.
Syrian Arab Republic
SEASONINGS
Syrian food is fragrant, colorful, spiced, and moderately heated. Mint, parsley, and cilantro are used extensively, and thyme, in dried form, features a popular za’atar mix. Spices are used even more generously than herbs – cumin, sumac, coriander, paprika, allspice, turmeric, cinnamon, cloves, mahlab, and mastic are staples. Fragrance comes from rose petals, orange blossoms, and saffron.
Syrians like their food tart, so they heavily use citrus, sumac, and fruit molasses – a thick, concentrated syrup, particularly from pomegranates.
One of the star spices in Syrian kitchens is Aleppo pepper – sun-dried, coarsely ground, and packed with character. Its popularity stretches well beyond Syria, finding a place in Turkey, Lebanon, and across the Mediterranean and Middle East. Peppers themselves came a long way before becoming a Syrian staple. Native to the Americas, they traveled through Spain and North Africa, eventually arriving in the Ottoman territories. Along the way, new varieties emerged, and one of the most celebrated was the Halaby pepper – Aleppo. As a major hub of the trade, Aleppo was popular. Today, though, the original Aleppo pepper has become harder to source due to the ongoing conflict in Syria, and much of what’s available now is grown in neighboring Turkey.
What makes it special is its balance: a deep, smoky flavor with natural saltiness and earthiness, plus a gentle kick of heat – milder than cayenne but hotter than jalapeño. Instead of blasting you with spice, it layers in complexity and depth. Toward the end of the pepper season, farmers and home cooks in Aleppo turn their surplus into a rich red paste known as debs flefleh, or ‘pepper molasses.’
In Syrian cooking, a few spice mixes show up everywhere—like za’atar, baharat, and the Aleppo seven-spice blend.
ZA’ATAR spice mix – thyme, sumac, toasted sesame seeds, and salt.
BAHARAT / 7 SPICE MIX, a complex Arabic spice blend that can include black pepper, cumin, coriander, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, cardamom, and sometimes paprika.
ALEPPO SEVEN-SPICE local Syrian variation, whose constituents may vary but usually consist of allspice, black pepper, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cardamom, and cloves, all ground into fine powder.
SAUCES
MUHAMMARA – roasted red peppers, walnuts, Aleppo pepper, garlic, olive oil, breadcrumbs, and pomegranate molasses.
TARATOR – sauce made from tahini, lemon juice, garlic, and water. It’s used as a dip or a sauce for falafel or fish.
SHATTAH – A hot sauce made from red chili peppers, garlic, and salt. It’s similar to North African harissa but with its own Syrian character.
TOUM – A strong garlic sauce made by emulsifying garlic with oil, lemon juice, and salt.