The Maluku Islands — Ternate, Tidore, Ambon, Banda, Seram, Buru — are the BIRTHPLACE of the global spice trade. Nutmeg, mace, and cloves are native ONLY to these islands. And yet, as documented in INDO-COLONIAL-01, the VOC's monopoly devastated the islands' culinary traditions by redirecting spice production away from local consumption toward export. What survives — and what is slowly being reclaimed — is a cuisine of extraordinary aromatic complexity. Malukan cooking uses nutmeg, mace, and clove not as occasional spices but as DAILY ingredients, in the way Javanese cooking uses turmeric or Padang cooking uses chilli. Fresh nutmeg (which most of the world never encounters — the nutmeg in spice jars is dried) is grated into fish preparations, sambal, and kue. Clove is chewed as a digestive (the original Indonesian breath freshener) and used in bumbu. Mace (the lacy red membrane around the nutmeg seed) is used in fish marinades.
INDONESIAN CUISINE — DEEP EXTRACTION BATCH 10