FabulousFusionFood's Spice Guide for Fenugreek Home Page

fenugreek seeds and dried fenugreek leaves The seeds and dried leaves of fenugreek, Trigonella foenum-graecum.
Welcome to the summary page for FabulousFusionFood's Spice guide to Fenugreek along with all the Fenugreek containing recipes presented on this site, with 96 recipes in total.

This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Cornish recipes added to this site.

These recipes, all contain as a major flavouring.

Fenugreek, Trigonella foenum-graecum has a native realm that extends from the eastern Mediterranean across to China, though it is now cultivated worldwide. It can easily be grown as a pot-herb, both for its leaves and the seeds which are used as a spice. It is a member of the Fabaceae family that includes the nitrogen-fixing legumes. As such fenugreek can survive in very poor soil. The name itself, 'fenugreek', is derived from the Latin foenum-graecum (Greek hay).

The leaves of fenugreek (image, right) are used as an herb both in the raw and dried state. In the dried form it is often sold as 'methi' and it is this that provides the 'curry' flavour in many Indian and Pakistani dishes. The seeds are used as a spice (often sold ground as 'ground fenugreek'). This is an important element of many pickles, curry powders and pastes, and is often encountered in the cuisine of the Indian subcontinent and Thailand. The seeds have a bitter taste that mellows when cooked and a very distinctive 'curry-like' aroma which is created by the aromatic compound, sotolone. If toasted before being ground fenugreek develops substituted pyrazines (the same scent compounds as found in cumin).

Fenugreek is also one of the ingredients in the making of injera/taita, a type of bread unique to Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine. It is also sometimes used as an ingredient in the production of clarified butter (ghee).

Fenugreek seeds have a bitter and aromatic taste. The dried leaves’ fragrance slightly resembles lovage; though they are lack any remarkable scent in the fresh state. Fenugreek seeds contains only minute quantities of an essen­tial oil. In the essen­tial oil, 40 dif­ferent com­pounds were found, further­more, n-alkanes, sesqui­terpenes, alkanoles and lac­tones were reported. The dominant aroma component in fenu­greek seeds is a hemi­terpenoid γ-lactone, sotolone (3-hydroxy 4,5-dimethyl 2(5H)-furan­one), which is contained in concen­trations up to 25 ppm. It supposedly forms by oxidative deamination of 4-hydroxy isoleucine. Sotolone has a spicy flavour and was also found a key flavour in fermented protein seasonings, e. g., Maggi sauce. There is chemical similarity between sotolone and the phthalides responsible for the quite similar flavour of lovage leaves. Toasted fenugreek seeds owe their altered, more nutty flavour to another type of hetero­cyclic compounds, the so-called pyrazines. See cumin for further information.

Fenugreek is an ancient spice, used for thousands of years in the region from Central Asia to Northern India (the Egyptians also mention the spice as essential to the mummification process), though it has only recently penetrated the western market (with the increasing popularity of Indian foods). It is also used in Ethiopian spice mixtures (particularly Berbere spice), is particularly favoured in Yemeni cuisine and is used in the cuisines of West, Central and South Asia (which are now the largest consumers).

The fenu­greek plants is probably native to the Eastern Medi­terra­nean, but is today found all over Asia, from the Medi­terra­nean to China. Though not much used in Europe today, fenugreek seeds are found in many curry blends. It is also an important spice in Iranian cookery.



The alphabetical list of all Fenugreek recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 96 recipes in total:

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Aam Ka Meetha Achaar
(Sweet Mango Chutney)
     Origin: India
Fijian Chicken Curry
     Origin: Fiji
Palandi
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Achaari Jhinga
(Indian Pickled Prawns)
     Origin: India
Fijian Goat Curry
     Origin: Fiji
Panch Phoron
     Origin: India
Achari Masala
     Origin: India
Filipino Yellow Curry Powder
     Origin: Philippines
Paneer Pasanda
     Origin: India
Amchar Masala
     Origin: Trinidad
Ghanaian Curry Powder
     Origin: Ghana
Phaal Chicken Curry
     Origin: India
Anardana Jheenga
(Pomegranate-flavoured Prawns)
     Origin: India
Good King Henry Aloo
     Origin: Fusion
Pickle Masala
     Origin: India
Arbi ki Bhaji
(Taro Curry)
     Origin: India
Grilled Mackerel with Spicy Dahl
     Origin: South Africa
Pineapple Pulissery
     Origin: India
Arnott's Curry Powder
     Origin: Britain
Gujarati Kadhi
     Origin: India
Pó de Caril
(Portuguese Curry Powder)
     Origin: Portugal
Balti Tandoori Keema
     Origin: Britain
Gurnard Curry
     Origin: Britain
Poudre de Colombo
     Origin: Mauritius
Bermuda Curry Powder
     Origin: Bermuda
Gutti Vankaya
(Stuffed Brinjal Curry)
     Origin: India
Prawn Balti
     Origin: Britain
Black Curry Powder
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Hot Curry Powder
     Origin: Anglo-Indian
Prawn Patia
     Origin: India
Bo-Kaap Kerrie Poeier
(Cape Malay Curry Powder)
     Origin: South Africa
Indian Chilli Pickle
     Origin: India
Pumpkin Sambar
     Origin: India
Bombay Murga Kari
(Bombay Chicken Curry)
     Origin: India
Indian Curry Paste
     Origin: Fusion
Pumpkin Vine Tips Tarkari
     Origin: Nepal
Breton Kari
(Breton Curry Power)
     Origin: France
Indian Mustard Curry Paste
     Origin: India
Royal Beef Biryani
     Origin: India
Cape Malay Leaf Masala
     Origin: South Africa
Jalfrezi Curry Powder
     Origin: India
Sambar Podi
(Sambar Powder)
     Origin: India
Cape Malay Red Leaf Masala
     Origin: South Africa
Jalfrezi Masala
     Origin: India
Sarson Aloo
     Origin: Fusion
Cari
(Vietnamese Curry Powder)
     Origin: Vietnam
Khmeli-Suneli
     Origin: Georgia
Special Curry Powder
     Origin: South Africa
Chemmeen Manga Curry
(Prawn and Mango Curry)
     Origin: India
Lampara Curry
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Special Jaipuri Masala
     Origin: India
Chemmen Roast
(Kerala Prawn Roast)
     Origin: India
Lashun ka Achar
(Indian Garlic Pickle)
     Origin: India
Spicy Sambar Curry
     Origin: Britain
Chicken Ghee Roast
     Origin: India
Malabar Peralan
(Malabar Fish Roast)
     Origin: India
Sri Lankan Chicken Curry
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Chicken White Curry
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Malaysian Fish Curry Powder
     Origin: Malaysia
Sri Lankan Toasted Meat Curry Powder
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Classic Vindaloo Curry
     Origin: India
Maldives Meat Curry Powder
     Origin: Maldives
Tamil Nadu Sambar Curry
     Origin: India
Comfrey Aloo
     Origin: Fusion
Mambazha Pulissery
     Origin: India
Tandoori Masala
     Origin: India
Cornish Chicken Curry
     Origin: England
Mangalorean Prawn Sukka
     Origin: India
Trini Curry Powder
     Origin: Trinidad
Curry Vovoka
(Malagasy Curry Powder)
     Origin: Madagascar
Mas Riha
(Maldives Tuna Curry)
     Origin: Maldives
Trini Goat and Duck Curry Powder
     Origin: Trinidad
Dhansak Masala
     Origin: India
Meatloaf with Indian Seasonings
     Origin: Fusion
Trinidadian Curry Duck
     Origin: Trinidad
Durban Fish Masala
     Origin: South Africa
Methi Kalia
(Spicy Fenugreek Meat)
     Origin: Bangladesh
Turkey Vindaloo Curry
     Origin: Fusion
Durban Leaf Masala
     Origin: South Africa
Mother-in-law Masala
     Origin: South Africa
Urulaikilangu Varuval
(Potato Chip Curry)
     Origin: India
Durban Masala
     Origin: South Africa
Mushroom Bhaji
     Origin: Britain
Vadouvan Curry Powder
     Origin: France
Eritrean Berbere Spice
     Origin: Eritrea
Mussel Hodi
     Origin: Sri Lanka
Venison Kebab
     Origin: South Africa
Ethiopian Berbere Sauce
     Origin: Ethiopia
Nettle Aloo
     Origin: Fusion
Vindaloo Curry Paste
     Origin: India
Faenum Graecum
(Fenugreek)
     Origin: Roman
Nigerian Curry Powder
     Origin: Nigeria
Vindaloo Curry Spice Powder
     Origin: India
Fijian Chicken and Potato Curry
     Origin: Fiji
Njandu Curry
(Kerala Crab Curry)
     Origin: India
Yemeni hawaij
     Origin: Yemen

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