Stone Ground
Allspice Berries - Ground
Allspice Berries - Ground
No Salt, No Sugar, No Preservatives
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Reach for ground allspice when one spice has to do the work of three. Despite the name, it is not a blend: it is a single dried berry that tastes like cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg at once, with a peppery, juniper-like warmth underneath that the imitations always miss. That bite is what makes it the quiet backbone of Jamaican jerk, Swedish meatballs, Cincinnati chili, pumpkin pies, and mulled cider alike.
The berry comes from the pimenta tree, prized in the cloud forests of Guatemala and the hills of Jamaica, where growers harvest the world's most fragrant "pimento berries." We grind ours fresh from whole berries in small batches, because allspice carries volatile oils that fade fast once ground. Supermarket jars that have sat for a year smell faintly of cardboard; fresh-ground is a different spice entirely, so use a lighter hand than you would with an old jar.
Stone-ground from whole berries, packed fresh. No salt, sugar, or fillers.
Common Questions
Is allspice a blend of different spices?
Is allspice a blend of different spices?
No. It is a single berry from the pimenta tree. The name comes from the fact that it tastes like several warming spices combined, cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg, but nothing is mixed in. That single-berry character is exactly why a homemade blend never quite matches it.
How do I substitute for it in a pinch?
How do I substitute for it in a pinch?
A common stand-in is equal parts cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves. It gets you close, but it misses the peppery, juniper-like edge of the real berry, so the result tends to read flat and overly sweet. Fresh allspice is worth keeping on hand for that reason.
Does ground allspice lose its flavor quickly?
Does ground allspice lose its flavor quickly?
Yes. Its aromatic oils are volatile and oxidize once the berry is ground, which is why old jars taste dusty. Keep it sealed away from light and heat, and because fresh-ground is far more potent than a stale jar, start with less than a recipe calls for and adjust up.
What dishes is it best in?
What dishes is it best in?
It crosses from savory to sweet effortlessly: jerk marinades, Swedish meatballs, Cincinnati-style chili, and Greek meat sauces on one side; pumpkin and apple pies, gingerbread, mulled cider, and chai on the other.
Is there an allergy worth knowing about?
Is there an allergy worth knowing about?
Allspice shares natural compounds with cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg, so people sensitive to those spices may react to it as well. It is not a safe swap for someone avoiding cinnamon.
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