50 Spices That Shaped History
How the World's Most Coveted Flavors Changed Civilization
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Every spice in your kitchen has a secret. Most of them involve war.
Black pepper paid the ransom for a Roman city. Nutmeg drove a company to genocide. Vanilla was locked inside a single country for three centuries until a twelve-year-old enslaved boy discovered how to set it free. Saffron was guarded so jealously that adulterating it was punishable by death.
50 Spices That Shaped History takes you inside the stories behind civilization's most coveted flavors — from the ancient trade routes that made fortunes and broke empires, to the kitchens where the world's cuisines were transformed by a handful of aromatic seeds, roots, and bark.
Inside, you'll discover:
- How the desire for black pepper sent Vasco da Gama around the tip of Africa — and changed the map of the world
- Why the Dutch East India Company massacred an entire island population to control the nutmeg supply
- How a Nobel Prize was won in a Hungarian kitchen, over a plate of paprika peppers
- The illegal spice that top chefs use in secret — and why the FDA banned it in 1954
- How salt built empires, financed revolutions, and why Gandhi chose it as the symbol of Indian independence
- The African berry that Columbus mistook for pepper — and that now flavors craft gin and artisan chocolate
From the sacred cacao ceremonies of ancient Mesoamerica to the Szechuan pepper that rewires the human nervous system, from the tonka bean that smells of heaven and is banned in America to the za'atar that has become a symbol of political resistance — these are not simple stories of discovery and flavor. They are stories of power, exploitation, obsession, and the extraordinary lengths human beings will go to for the taste of something rare.
Spanning 50 spices across 10,000 years of human history, this is the book for anyone who has ever wondered why the world's most ordinary kitchen ingredients have the most extraordinary pasts.