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​Five flavours India introduced to global cuisine​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 16, 2025, 21:18 IST
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5 flavours India introduced to global cuisine

Indian food doesn’t just stay in its own lane; it wanders, settles, and leaves behind flavours the world keeps coming back to. Over centuries, traders, travellers, and home cooks have carried pieces of the Indian kitchen far beyond its borders. Along the way, spices and recipes picked up local accents, blending into new dishes without losing their roots. Some arrived quietly, slipping into soups and breads; others came in hot, changing the way entire countries cooked. Scroll down to see where those flavours took root.

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Cardamom - a soft touch with lasting charm

Cardamom doesn’t shout; it leans in and lingers. Crack a pod and the scent is warm, floral, and a little mysterious, like it’s keeping a secret. Its perfume slips into cakes in Sweden, coffee in the Middle East, and spiced teas everywhere in between. Back home, it’s the soul of kheer and masala chai. And beyond its delicate sweetness, cardamom helps digestion along, one of those flavours that feels as good as it tastes.

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Turmeric - gold in a spoon

For centuries, turmeric sat in Indian kitchens as both spice and medicine. It colours curries a deep marigold, gives pickles their sunny edge, and turns warm milk into a comfort drink. The rest of the world caught on late, blending it into lattes and wellness shots, drawn by curcumin – the compound linked to fighting inflammation. Here, it’s just dinner. Elsewhere, it’s a revelation.

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Tamarind - tang that wakes up the tongue

Crack open its brittle shell and you’ll find sticky pulp that’s equal parts sharp, sweet, and addictive. In India, tamarind makes sambar sing and pani puri water sparkle. Its deep, tangy note can turn something ordinary into something you can’t stop tasting. Abroad, it sneaks into Thai soups, Mexican sweets, and even Worcestershire sauce. It’s good for digestion, but really – its magic is in the way it makes every other flavour stand taller.

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Cumin - warmth in a seed

Drop cumin seeds into hot oil and the kitchen changes instantly. That deep, toasty scent is as familiar in Indian tadkas as it is in Moroccan tagines or Mexican chilli. Give it a quick sizzle and it releases a warmth that lingers in both the dish and the air. It grounds a dish, ties flavours together, and, as a bonus, is kind to the stomach. A small seed with a long reach.

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Chilli - heat with a history

Chillies may have started life in the Americas, but in India they found endless jobs – powdered, pickled, fresh, or fried. From here, the heat travelled again, finding homes in kitchens across Asia and Africa. The kick wakes up taste buds, brings a rush of vitamin C, and, for those who love it, turns eating into a small adventure.

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