Saffron
From Freepedia
- This article is about the spice. For other uses, see Saffron (disambiguation).
Saffron is the name given to the dried stigma and part of the style of the saffron crocus, traditionally called Crocus sativus, which are harvested, dried, and used for cooking. Saffron has a pleasant spicy smell, and it contains a dye that colors food a distinctive deep golden colour. Safflower, Carthamus tinctorius, is often used as a less expensive substitute for saffron, as is turmeric, Curcuma longa, which mimics saffron's color well but has a very different flavour.
The word "saffron" in English is also used for a shade of yellow as well as to refer to the plant.
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Etymology
The word ‘saffron’ comes from the Arabic word asfar أَصْفَر which means yellow, or za‘faran زَعْفَرَان, the name of the herb in Arabic.
Biology
The saffron crocus is a natural chromosome mutation, a sterile triploid variant of an eastern Mediterranean autumn-flowering crocus, C. cartwrightianus, that may have originated in Crete. Being sterile, the plant must be propagated by human aid, lifting and dividing the corms.
History
Saffron stigmata found in Sumerian sites provide evidence that saffron was an article of long-distance trade before the Minoan palace-culture reached a peak in the 2nd millennium BC. Written records show that saffron has been used medicinally in the treatment of 90 illnesses for over four millennia. According to recent research based on Minoan frescoes on the island of Santorini in the Aegean, saffron may have been used as a medicine in the 15th century BC. Persian Saffron (Crocus sativus var. Hausknechtii) was cultivated at Derbena and Isfahan in Iran in the 10th Century.
In England during the 15th-18th centuries, saffron was grown extensively in parts of Cambridgeshire and Essex. The Essex town of Saffron Walden got its name as a market center for the saffron trade.
Uses
Saffron is a vital cooking ingredient of many Arabian, Central Asian, European and Indian dishes. In European cuisine, it is used in many famous dishes, including the Spanish paella and Fabada Asturiana, the French bouillabaisse, and the Italian risotto alla milanese.
Because of its high cost, dishes traditionally made with saffron often use tumeric to dilute or replace its more costly counterpart.
In herbal medicine, saffron is used for its eupeptic, carminative, and emmenagogic properties.
Though it is the most expensive spice in the world (and in fact, the most expensive food by weight), saffron has also been used as a fabric dye. Traditionally, clothes colored by this particularly luminous dye were worn by the noble classes, giving the plant a ritualized caste significance.
Production
Spain, India, and Iran are producers of saffron. Saffron is expensive because of the difficulty of extracting the stigmata of the crocus individually by hand and the number of crocuses it takes to make up a given weight, because the aromatic parts are so small. A pound (1/2 kg) ($500 in bulk, even more if higher quality) of saffron requires approximately 35,000 - 100,000 flowers - depending on the size of each stigma; each crocus contributes three. Kashmir "Mogra Cream" saffron or Indian saffron is considered by many food connoiseurs to be the finest in the world. Being the hardest to obtain, it is the most prohibitive in terms of pricing among other varieties like Spanish superior and creme saffrons.
See also
Saffron is, at least superficially, the subject of Donovan's song "Mellow Yellow".
External links
- Gernot Katzer's Spice Dictionary: Saffron; numerous further links
- Saffron A-Z Saffron Encyclopedia
- Lapis & Gold: The Pigment Almanac The history of saffron's use as a pigment in painting.
- Medicinal and chemical properties of saffron.



