Anonymous wrote:I read through 11 pages of spice hate and then couldn't remember the posts I wanted to quote, so I'll just leave a few thoughts here.
Dill: Always fresh, never dried spice. If you dislike dill, never visit Ukraine.
Rosemary: Love the flavor, hate that it's basically tiny knives determined to rip holes into my gums and roof of mouth. Tastes amazing baked into sourdough bread. I use it in creamy pastas a lot as well.
Turmeric: I hate that it permanently stains anything it touches. I can't actually taste the difference between when it's used or not, so I generally skip it in recipes. I'm intrigued by the health benefits but can't get past the staining.
Tarragon: There's a reason why it sounds like a dragon name. Evil. One time I ordered Tarkhuna in a Georgian restaurant and almost died. I didn't know what tarragon was, so I didn't know that a tarragon soda would be undrinkable.
The same way people feel about the lingering odor of curry spices, I feel about gochujang. My body odor reeks after consuming even just a spoonful. Doesn't stop me from loading up on Korean cuisine (or Indian, for that matter). Sorry if you catch me too long between showers!
Anonymous wrote:I despise black pepper. I can’t even use napkins from plastic silverware packages because the pepper smell permeates and it makes me gag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anything licorice-y. So fennel, star anise, Chinese five spice, I'm sure the list goes on. It's the only thing I can taste and ruins the dish for me.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like most spices including the licorice flavor (though not fennel seeds but more because of mouth feel than flavor) and cumin and curry. Some herbs I don’t like are rosemary and sage - again because of mouth feel. I don’t understand the point of bay leaves.
I grew up in a house where almost the only things added to food were salt (and lots of it) and pepper. I use them now in recipes but not at the table. I have traveled a lot and use many spices/herbs that remind me of places I have been. So for me, it’s acquired, not cultural.
My brother has that genetic aversion to cilantro BTW.
The point of bay leaves.. one of my staple of my spice cabinet is that you add it to dishes and the goodness sips into the dish and
then it smells like it. You only need ONE leaf per gigantic pot. Very easily to overdo with it so this is really something you don't need to worry yourself about, if you did not grow with it and are in need for using it you can live a very happy life without it.
I grew up with it and I can be happy without it just the same. But OMG when I add it.. that tastes like childhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dislike cumin and curry.
HATE cilantro if that counts!
Can someone explain what curry spice is? I’ve never come across it before and I’m of Indian origin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird how many of you dislike cumin and other spices common to Indian cooking - I think they’re the most wonderful, and they’re also very healthful. It makes me sad how late in life I ‘discovered’ Indian food and cooking.
It really feels like spices build themselves into the person's genetic code and then makes us like them or not. Kind of like a virus if you will.. we have antibodies to some spices and others we are totally exposed .. and hence we hate them.
Anonymous wrote:Caraway seeds! Ruins a food for me every time.
Anonymous wrote:Anything licorice-y. So fennel, star anise, Chinese five spice, I'm sure the list goes on. It's the only thing I can taste and ruins the dish for me.
Anonymous wrote:I'm one who has the thing where cilantro tastes like soap.
I genuinely have no idea why people like it - I intellectually understand it tastes different to me, but I have a hard time imagining it. Why would you eat soap?