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Peppercorns do not grow in a standard size , but an equivalent amount would be approx. 1/4 tsp. per 10 peppercorns.
Yes, freshly ground pepper does taste fresher. This is because the flavor of the pepper seeds remains locked until the very moment when they are ground up by the electric pepper grinder. If the pepper was not freshly ground and had been previously ground and stored, then it has already lost much of its scent, its aroma, which gives the ground pepper its freshness. Pre ground pepper will still taste hot, but it will most probably not have the flavor or scent of freshly ground pepper from an electric pepper grinder and thus won't appear as fresh.
As far as the salt goes, there's no advantage. The salt is the same whether from a grinder or a shaker. For pepper, however, a grinder has an advantage. Fresh ground pepper is much spicier than pre-ground pepper from a shaker.
Cayenne Pepper, Perhaps? Used sparingly, at least compared with the amount of chili powder you would normally used.
Not really. Ground sage has had the dried leaves finely pulverized. You can see the leaves of dried sage. It can be crumbled and seen in the dish you are using it in. Ground sage blends in much like ground pepper.
1/8 teaspoon dry cayenne pepper is equal to one fresh cayenne pepper. Note: I tried using the dry instead of fresh. Turned out very thin. Too thin. I wouldn't recommend using powder for sauces etc.
Bedrock by young money and lil Wayne
Allspice peppers are much more potent than the ground version. As a result, the amont of ground allspice to equate to 3 whole peppers is 4.5 Tbsp. It seems like a lot, however the flavor and essence of the pepper is lost mostly when it is ground and not freshly.
how much crushed red pepper would one small dried pepper yield
How much ground thyme do I use in place of chopped thyme
$.50 per pepper
stop putting in so much black pepper!!!!!!!