nutmeg or allspice
Nutmeg or allspice.
Cinnamon or all spice
alolspice (jamaican pimento)
Nutmeg?1? Haven't you thought about that
If one teaspoon of whole cloves is approximately equivalent to 0.75 teaspoons of ground cloves, then 0.50 teaspoons of whole cloves is equivalent to 0.375 teaspoons of ground cloves. If you do not have ground cloves, then a substitute to use is ground allspice.
ground cloves in a spice bottle can be whole ground cloves or they can be only part of a ground clove
To substitute for 1 teaspoon allspice, you can use either of the two following combinations:1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/2 tsp ground cloves1/2 tsp ground cinnamon, 1/4 tsp. ground cloves, 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
Yes but cloves are not a replacement for anything. Just trust me on this.
Substitute 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon plus 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger, 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg and 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves for 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice.
4 cloves
Please let me know what proportions is use of spice to make all spice
Good heavens, NO! Cloves and garlic do not resemble each other in flavor any more than chocolate and horseradish do. You would NEVER substitute one for the other. They are two of the most distinctive - and different - flavors in cooking. A clover of garlic is one section of the garlic head. Cloves, as a spice, look like tiny nails. They have one of the most pungent and pervasive flavors of any spice, and must be used with great discretion.
I have done this before, and found that whole cloves vary in size. Some cloves can be twice the size of their companions; so, this is not easy to answer. Does your recipe require that you grind the cloves? If so, then you should grind enough to occupy 2 teaspoons. I realize fresh spices are a good practice to follow, but cloves are a strong spice; and, I have found that my guests generally can't distinguish cloves from an unopened bottle of ground cloves versus the fresh-ground originals.
As a general rule you would use one half as much of a ground spice in a dish as opposed to the whole spice. But take care even the reduced amount of a ground spice may color your food a whole lot more than the whole spice would. I have turned gravy green with to much ground rosemary.
Yes. Cloves are used as a spice, and are not made with wheat.
Nothing tastes like cardamom. Cardamom substitutes are ground nutmegs, mace, ground cinnamon, ground cloves. Make sure you use these spices in certain combinations like equal parts of nutmeg and cinnamon or cinnamon and ground clove or ground clove and nutmegs.