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Five-spice powder (Chinese: 五香粉; pinyin: wǔxiāng fěn) is a spice mixture of five or more spices—commonly star anise, cloves, Chinese cinnamon, Sichuan pepper, and fennel seeds—used predominantly in almost all branches of Chinese cuisine.
Yu Yee Brand Five Spice Powder: 1.25 PPM of lead. BaiLiFeng Five Spice Powder: 11.15 PPM of lead. Spicy King Five Spices Powder: 1.05 PPM of lead. Badia Cinnamon Powder: 1.03 PPM of lead. Deep ...
Three Rivers cinnamon stick powder (1.26 ppm) Yu Yee Brand five spice powder (1.25 ppm) BaiLiFeng five spice powder (1.15 ppm) Spicy King five spices powder (1.05 ppm) Badia cinnamon powder (1.03 ppm)
Three Rivers Cinnamon Stick Powder, 1.26 ppm. Yu Yee Brand Five Spice Powder, 1.25 ppm. BaliLiFeng Five Spice Powder, 1.15 ppm. Spicy King Five Spices Powder, 1.05 ppm.
Five-spice powder, a blend of cassia (Chinese cinnamon), star anise, cloves, and two other spices, usually fennel seeds and szechuan peppercorns. Húng lìu , a Vietnamese blend Shichimi , a mix of ground red chili pepper, Japanese pepper, roasted orange peel, black and white sesame seed, hemp seed, ground ginger and nori.
Húng lìu and five-spice powder have similar ingredients and can be used interchangeably on meat dishes. Húng lìu differs from the more well-known Cantonese blend in the portions of each ingredient, thus producing a distinct taste. [3]
Three Rivers cinnamon stick powder: 1.26 ppm. Yu Yee Brand five spice powder: 1.25 ppm. BaiLiFeng five spice powder: 1.15 ppm. Spicy King five spice powder: 1.05 ppm.
The yolk is yellow all the way through, though overcooked eggs will have a thin, harmless greyish layer while the core is the usual yellow. The flavor depends on the tea (type and strength) and variety of spices used. Five-spice powder adds a savory, slightly salty tone to the egg white, and the tea brings out the yolk's flavor.