Tamarind in a sentence as a noun

Maybe that's just because of the tamarind though.

I have a Pad Thai recipe that calls for both fish sauce and tamarind paste.

You can search for it as "tamarindo ollita".

Beware: a lot of the off-the-shelf sauces don't have any trace of tamarind.

This reminded me, I keep wondering why the tamarind fruit has been left out of Western cuisine.

It's vinegar + molasses + tamarind + salt + sugar + spices, with the fish just there for added umami taste.

You are right, a lot of Asian cuisines rely on other strong flavors like fish sauce, tamarind, seaweed, and fermented pastes.

You might be referring to tamarind based candy, particularly tamarind sold in clay containers.

Heh, I'm actually a designer as well, and a printmaker who was vetted for the tamarind institute a while ago. Designers don't want to be boxed into the art world, as modern art is strictly solipsistic, and attempts to make a statement in and of itself and it's context.

How, exactly, does getting tamarind and nopalitos into the aisles of Safeway count as "homogenization"?

You find trace amounts in Worcestershire sauce and the occasional Indian dish and you can get tamarind juice/candy at some Mexican places if you know what to look for, but by and large it's unheard of and unobtainable.

Yet he did posterity a good turn by planting the dusty streets of Mandalay with tamarind trees which cast a pleasant shade until the Japanese incendiary bombs burned them down in 1942.> The poet, James Shirley, seems to have generalised too freely when he said that Only the actions of the just Smell sweet and blossom in their dust.

If we need a lot of help and local services, if your taxes rise and your street begins to look and feel strange and everything smells like turmeric and tamarind paste, and your favourite shop is replaced by a halal butcher, your schoolyard chatter becoming ching-chongese and phlegmy “kh”s and “gh”s, and even if, after all that, we don’t spend the rest of our days in grateful ecstasy, atoning for our need.

Tamarind definitions

noun

long-lived tropical evergreen tree with a spreading crown and feathery evergreen foliage and fragrant flowers yielding hard yellowish wood and long pods with edible chocolate-colored acidic pulp

See also: tamarindo

noun

large tropical seed pod with very tangy pulp that is eaten fresh or cooked with rice and fish or preserved for curries and chutneys

See also: tamarindo