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IFT Annual Meeting & Food Expo
Oct 21, 2007

Indus Organics launches Beta Version of Medical usage search for herbs & spices

Indus Organic launches beta version of medical usage search using latest software technolgies to educate customers.  Search tool educates customer about the medical usage of  spices and herbs. Indus is the first company to launch the software in the world.

Indus Organics launches Retail Brand at Allthings Organic Show
Indus Organic launches retail brand of organic Malabar Herbs and Spices at All Things Organic show (May 5-8) at McCormick Place in Chicago. Come and see our new product range at booth #453

All Things Organic
January 1, 2007

Indus Organics Launches Saving the Community Program

Indus Organics has launched a giving back to community program to support the farmer education, organic farming, child education and saving the earth program. Company will donate part of the profits from the sale of organic spices, herbs and tea products.

Allspice
  Allspice, also called Jamaica pepper, Myrtle pepper, pimento, or newspice, is a spice which is the dried unripe fruit of the Pimenta dioica plant. The name "allspice" was coined by the English, who thought it combined the flavour of several spices, such as cloves, pepper, and even cinnamon and nutmeg. Allspice has a complex aroma, hence its name. It is an aromatic spice with a taste similar to a combination of cinnamon and cloves, but hotter and more peppery. It reportedly scores between 100 and 500 su on the Scoville scale of hotness (most often used for chile peppers).

Most Allspice is produced in Jamaica, but some other sources for allspice include Guatemala, Honduras, as well as Mexico. Jamaican Allspice is considered to be superior due to its higher oil content, which give it a more appealing flavor. Allspice is not, as is mistakenly belived by some people who have only come across it in ground form, a mixture of spices. Rather, it is the dried fruit of the Pimenta dioica plant. The fruit is picked when it is green and unripe, traditionaly they are then sun dried. When dry they are brown and look like large brown peppercorns.


Allspice is most commonly sold as whole dried fruits or as a powder. The whole fruits have a longer shelf-life than the powdered product and produce a more aromatic product when freshly ground before use. Fresh leaves are also used where available: they are similar in texture to bay leaves and are thus infused during cooking and then removed before serving. Unlike bay leaves, they lose much flavour when dried and stored. The leaves and wood are often used for smoking meats where allspice is a local crop.


Allspice is one of the most important ingredients of Caribbean cuisine. It is used in Caribbean jerk seasoning (the wood is used to smoke jerk in Jamaica, although the spice is a good substitute), in mole sauces, and in pickling; it is also an ingredient in commercial sausage preparations and curry powders. Allspice is commonly used in Great Britain and appears in many dishes, including in cakes. Even in many countries where allspice is not very popular in the household, such as Germany, it is used in large amounts by commercial sausage makers. Allspice is also a main flavor used in barbeque sauces.


Folklore suggests that allspice provides relief for digestive problems. Allspice is a small shrubby tree, quite similar to the bay laurel in size and form. It can be grown outdoors in the tropics and subtropics with normal garden soil and watering. Smaller plants can be killed by frost, although larger plants are more tolerant. It adapts well to container culture and can be kept as a houseplant or in a greenhouse. The plant has separate sexes, hence male and female plants must be kept in proximity in order to allow fruits to develop.


 
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