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Name: BrimstoneRecipes.com
Location: United States

My name is Mercedes Baynes and it's no surprise that I am doing this at all. The only thing that is surprising is the way in which I am reaching out to you. I always love to cook.. and be creative with different flavors. It is a great feeling when I take a bunch of herbs, spices and other raw ingredients and just create a great meal. For me, every dish I create is a masterpiece and I get the most satisfaction just by having others indulge in my meals. My style of cooking is very "old school caribbean. I love simple and different methods of preparing dishes to create meals that are just filled with flavors and satisfying to both the eyes and palate. One pot meals, stews, fish, soups, fritters, cakes and puddings and homemade drinks. Stew down salt fish and johnny cake with a glass of ginger beer or ice water great on a Saturday afternoon. Ms Nicalos ginger wine bread pudding or John Miller's rice and spinach cook-up with fish are some of my favorite dishes. I can go on and on. How I miss those days. I really hope that this website will bring back memories in some of us and create new ones in others.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Cinnamon

Cinnamon is one of those spices that nearly everybody uses, but nobody seems to really know where it comes from. Cinnamon is actually a very small evergreen plant that is found mostly in Sri Lanka and Southern India. The spice that most Americans use is actually taken from the bark of the cinnamon tree, which undergoes a long process. When it comes to Caribbean cuisine, cinnamon is an integral part of Caribbean cooking.

In order to create the cinnamon that we use today, the bark must be stripped from the tree, coarsely pounded, and set aside to soak in sea water. The cinnamon itself is a yellow color, but when we buy cinnamon in the store, it is usually a red to brown color. Cinnamon is used in nearly every type of Caribbean dish, and this aromatic spice will truly make your stomach start to rumble. One of the most popular dishes that uses cinnamon as a predominant spice is Caribbean jerk. Jerk is a careful combination of many different spices, – jerk actually contains around twenty different spices -- but no jerk can be complete without the addition of cinnamon.

Of course, cinnamon is also widely used in a number of Caribbean desserts as well, which makes this one spice that is entirely versatile. Since the Caribbean borrows different spices from various cultures, the cinnamon spice is one of the most popular types of spice, and it is used in nearly every kitchen throughout the Caribbean. Within North America, cinnamon is also a very popular spice, but Caribbean chefs have taken this heart warming spice to a whole new level.

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