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Quote from: Phil (Chaa006) on December 28, 2011, 12:28 PMI would assume that generic "cardamom" would be green cardamon, whilst black cardamom would be explicitly glossed, just as I would assume that "jeera" or "cumin" would be white cumin whilst "kala jeera" / "black cumin" would be stated explicitly.In many cases you may be right. In other cases, you might make an unsafe assumption in my opinion.
I would assume that generic "cardamom" would be green cardamon, whilst black cardamom would be explicitly glossed, just as I would assume that "jeera" or "cumin" would be white cumin whilst "kala jeera" / "black cumin" would be stated explicitly.
Here's another one - if a recipe states to use 1 tsp, 1 dsp and 1 tbls of three ingredients and says nothing else, would you assume that's 5ml, 10ml and 15ml respectively?
QuoteHere's another one - if a recipe states to use 1 tsp, 1 dsp and 1 tbls of three ingredients and says nothing else, would you assume that's 5ml, 10ml and 15ml respectively?No, because I neither think in ml nor convert to ml. If a recipe specifies {tea|desert|table}spoonsful, then I use measuring spoons of those sizes; if it specifies ml, I use a measuring cylinder (or a measuring jug, for quantities in excess of 100ml).
George, if I was to measure 1 tbs of Jalpur Garam Masala (just to keep it on topic ) my measuring spoon would portion up 15ml for a level tbs because that's what it says on the handle ie; 1 tbsp = 15 ml .Got them from slimming world
I was hoping to keep away from the complexities of overseas measurements, as mentioned by Razor and stick to UK conventions and measures. Do you know the ml quantities measured out with your measuring spoons. For example, is a tbls 15ml, 17.76ml or something else?
That's what I would do, and expect to get but I now realise it's even more of a minefield. For example, I searched googe for "uk tbls ml" and google gave the "Imperial" measure as your 17.76 measure to several places of decimals.
1 Imperial tablespoon = 17.7581714 millilitres
It would be interesting to know if any CR0 member has a set of known British measuring spoons of sufficient antiquity that the tablespoon measure thereof is "about 17 3/4 ml".