Blade of Mace Quantity

Blade of Mace Quantity - Samurai with Katana in Black and White

When a recipe calls for a blade of mace, what is the expected quantity? The pieces of mace in the bag I have literally come in every size, from the entire husk, down to tiny fragments. The thickness is pretty uniform, so two-dimensions would be enough to define it. Alternatively, I could conceptualize volume-if-ground as well; although it needs to actually be kept whole.

In case the context matters, I'm cooking from 660 Curries by Raghavan Iyer.

Thanks!



Best Answer

Personally, I conceptualize an average blade-of-mace size, and use that to determine if I should tear a bit of or not. The outcome will sometimes be a bit more macey, sometimes a bit less macey. For me, it's part of the charm of a curry, and also helps finding out personal preference of dosage for mace.

The same problem exists with "an inch of ginger", "a 2 inch piece of dalchini": There's thick and thin parts of ginger, smaller or wider parts of dalchini. I do the same there: Consider what the average part looks like (i.e. for ginger, the more bulbous part seems to be main part, with smaller knobs on the outside), and use that to take your measure.

Ideally they would specify everything in tea- or tablespoons, which would at least help for grindable spices, but in my experience, most indian recipes don't when it comes to mace, ginger and dalchini (and of course garlic: Big cloves, small cloves?). (Although for ginger, they sometimes specify "a thumb sized piece of ginger", which is quite workable).

I just accept that sometimes it will be a bit more gingery/macey/cinnamony, sometimes less. I have never had a failed curry because of it, it's just that the taste will float within a certain (acceptable) range of flavors.

enter image description here




Pictures about "Blade of Mace Quantity"

Blade of Mace Quantity - Samurai with Katana
Blade of Mace Quantity - Selective Focus Photography of Leaves With Water Drop
Blade of Mace Quantity - Closeup Photo of Green Grass Field



How much does a strand of mace weigh?

Nutmeg is the seed of the tree, roughly egg-shaped and about 20 to 30 mm (0.8 to 1.2 in) long and 15 to 18 mm (0.6 to 0.7 in) wide, and weighing between 5 and 10 g (0.2 and 0.4 oz) dried, while mace is the dried \u201clacy\u201d reddish covering or aril of the seed.

What is strands of mace?

Mace (Myristica fragrans of the family Myristicaceae) is the lacy outer layer encircling a whole nutmeg seed. Also called the aril, this outer layer can be removed, dried, and used as a spice in its own right. Ground mace is sold in powdered form, or you can find it in dried, whole pieces called mace blades.

Can I use ground mace instead of Mace blades?

Mace is the feathery coating that grows around the outside of the nutmeg seed, which is peeled away and dried when nutmeg is harvested. Mace blades - or blades of mace as they are also known - can be used whole or ground.

What is a sheath of mace?

\u0e14\u0e2d\u0e01\u0e08\u0e31\u0e19\u0e17\u0e19\u0e4c Mace is the dried "lacy" reddish covering or aril of the Nutmeg seed. It is one of the only tropical fruits that is the source of two different spices, obtained from different parts of the plant.



HOW TO GET VAL'ANYR, HAMMER OF THE ANCIENT KINGS THE FASTEST WAY│World of Warcraft




More answers regarding blade of Mace Quantity

Answer 2

The whole mace avril is "roughly broken" into pieces called blades. One blade of mace is supposed to be enough to flavor a meal of four to six portions. One teaspoon ground mace should equal one tablespoon mace blades. A blade of mace is roughly equivalent to a half a teaspoon of ground mace when substituting in recipes.

So, a blade of mace is a "roughly broken" piece of the whole mace. It is likely a significant portion, not a tiny piece, if one blade is supposed to flavor a whole dish? It is also likely to be less than a tablespoon (as one tbs is mentioned in plural), can be roughly equivalent to a half a teaspoon of mace - at a tsp per tbs conversion, perhaps a teaspoon and a half of cracked mace pieces, if they're on the larger side, of course - and less, a teaspoon or maybe under three-quarters of a teaspoon, for tiny cracked pieces since they'll pack down much tighter than larger loose curls.

The first picture below is supposed to be of very good quality mace blades, very photogenic, so likely to be of a good, standard, size. This can be compared to the second photo, of a whole mace husk. And taking into account that a recipe might use one blade for a whole dish as mentioned earlier, or might call for three blades as the OP mentioned (the difference between the amount of spice for a background vs primary flavor, perhaps), I'm thinking a blade is a significant chunk of the mace husk, but not the whole thing.

At a rough guess, maybe a blade is supposed to be a third to a fifth of a whole mace.

This is kinda a big difference, but that might play out in recipes which mention something like one large or two small blades. Of course, one can always season to taste, and add more or less as the dish requires - but I think grabbing a third to a fifth of a whole mace husk, or about a teaspoon of smaller mace pieces per blade, and adjusting from there might be a reasonable starting point.

blades of mace versus Whole mace

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Azis Js, Azis Js, Pixabay, Johannes Plenio