|
THE ORIGINAL SMOKE AND
SPICE COMPANY
is proud to present two of the
finest culinary products in the land.
No
vampire would surely dare cross the
threshold of Marcus Peters and Rowan
Jones' Somerfield home — the smell of
smoked garlic should be enough to send
them screaming into the night.
And, if you are inclined to take vampire stories with a pinch of
salt, well, Peters and Jones can help
there, too, with a platter of smoked,
spiced sea salt at the ready.
The pair are owners of the Original Smoke and Spice Company, and
although the actual smoking is done at
their specially designed smokehouse in
Lincoln, they naturally keep a good
supply of product at home.
"We are just hooked on it," says Jones. "We are the original
converts."
And it seems they are not alone. The smoked garlic bulbs and
smoked, tumble-roasted, spiced sea salt
are proving winners for the young
couple, helped along by their
enthusiastic approach to marketing. The
pair spend their weekends selling the
garlic and salt at markets and South
Island festivals, where their "London
barrow boy" interactive approach turns
what could be an ordinary transaction
into a bit of fun for buyer and seller
alike.
Peters knows what he is talking about when he mentions the east
London influence. He spent 10 years
there, working as a chef and often
buying supplies directly from the
stallholders at local produce markets.
His kitchen routine had long included smoking garlic and flavouring
salt for use in his menus, and soon
after his return to Christchurch a
couple of years ago he decided to turn
those skills into a business.
"There was a bit of trial and error in it," he says. "I designed
and built the smoker myself and I had to
learn how to work with the variety of
atmospheric conditions we get here. I
smoke about 100kg of garlic each time so
we are talking pretty big batches. You
can't afford to blow it."
Large "printanor" garlic bulbs from Marlborough are used for their
high volatile-oil content and strong
flavour. They are smoked whole over
manuka, bay leaves and rosemary for
maximum flavour, while retaining the
firmness of the cloves. The resulting
garlic is mild, with a slightly nutty,
herby flavour along with the expected
smokey, woody tones. It adds an extra
flavour to many foods.
Solar salt from Lake Grassmere is used in the spiced salt. It is
smoked on screens, then tumble-roasted
with garlic, shallots, coriander,
mustard seeds and chilli. The roasting
drives the oil deep into the salt to
give a delicious, complex flavour.
It even looks good, with the golden grains of the roasted salt
flecked with the colours of the other
ingredients, and there has been interest
from a United States purchaser.
"This salt has a bit of a cult status now," Peters says. "Anyone
who tries it never goes back to ordinary
salt."
And as for those vampires? They're not
saying, but the garlic seems to keep
colds away — neither Jones nor Peters
has had a cold for about a year and a
half. |