Garam Masala
North India — Mughal court cooking tradition; variants across all Indian regional traditions
Garam masala — literally 'warm spice mixture' — is the most important finishing spice blend in North Indian cooking. Unlike many spice mixes that are cooked into the base of a dish, garam masala is typically added at the end of cooking to preserve its volatile aromatic compounds. This is its primary distinction: it is a finishing seasoning, not a cooking spice.
The word 'garam' refers to the Ayurvedic concept of warming foods — those that raise body heat — rather than to heat in the chilli sense. The warming spices are: green cardamom, black cardamom, cassia bark (or true cinnamon), cloves, black pepper, bay leaf, and often mace and nutmeg. Cumin and coriander sometimes appear; many North Indian cooks insist they do not belong in a proper garam masala.
Every region of India has its own garam masala ratio. Kashmiri garam masala is heavy on cardamom, clove, and cinnamon — it is intensely fragrant and used in small quantities. Punjabi garam masala is more cumin-forward and robust. Lucknowi garam masala includes mace and nutmeg for a more perfumed profile. Commercial garam masala is a compromise that satisfies none of these regional profiles particularly well.
Home-ground garam masala, made from whole dry-roasted spices, is categorically superior to any commercial version. The difference is not subtle.