$9.99

Kampot pepper from the region of the same name in Cambodia is one of the best peppers in the world. The muggy-hot climate near the coast of the Gulf of Thailand and the heavy clay soils create the perfect basis for outstanding pepper qualities. This pepper is cultivated by hand, no artificial fertilizers or pesticides are used during cultivation.

All KAMPOT pepper varieties come from the same plant but the colour is determined by the degree of ripeness and processing. This red pepper is very rare and made from completely ripe, unpeeled pepper fruits. Red pepper is very difficult to produce, only very few and best pepper farmers dare to take this risk. Due to its high degree of ripeness, real red pepper is particularly aromatic and almost fruity, with a strong pungency.

We recommend using Red Kampot pepper only freshly grounded in order to bring out its full aroma perfectly. Our Kampot Red pepper delivers strong yet delicate aromas. Its taste, which can range from intensely spicy to mildly sweet also reveals floral and citrus hints. Kampot Red pepper has a unique flavour and smell distinguishing it from other types of peppercorns. The hot taste also has slight flavours of eucalyptus and mint, you have to try it out!

Country of origin: Cambodia

SKU: 98redkampot
Key Benefits

We recommend using Red Kampot pepper corn only freshly grounded in order to bring out its full aroma perfectly. Suits perfectly with meat, poultry and fish.

Taste can range from intensely spicy to mildy sweet also reveals floral and citrus hints.

These peppercorns are the best in taste and can also be used after grinding to add them to the fruit-like notes of crushed red pepper which are ideal for sweeter dessert dishes.

35gr / 1.24oz jar


 

Why is Kampot pepper the best?

Down in the foothills of the Damrai Mountains pepper farmers, farming conditions for whole peppercorns flourish.

The hot, humid weather and the ground elevation make for the perfect environment to produce the vines from which these little balls of flavor are plucked, as the heavy clay soil offers a superior aroma and taste to most other cracked black pepper you’ll find in pantries across the world.

Farmed outside of the city of Kampot, just three miles from the stunning Gulf of Thailand, these organic peppercorns are cultivated by hand free from the use of artificial fertilizers. As the salt of the earth as pepper can get, basically.

With an almost raisin-like appearance akin to that of tellicherry peppercorns, the flavor is something very different than the usual ones associated with Asian pepper.

What you’re tasting here is an ancient tradition. The use of Kampot peppercorns dates back to the 13th century when the ancient tradition of farming these was largely the same as it is now.

For centuries, the people of the region enjoyed the delights of its smokey, floral notes, so much so that French colonials in the 19th and 20th centuries started exporting it back to the West, where they really become a fixture of food cooking in Europe.

Production halted during the Cambodian Civil War between 1967-1975 but the turn of the millennium has seen a boom in its popularity with even Anthony Bourdain name-checking it on one of his shows. If it got his approval, then you know we’re dealing with something of high caliber.

How do you use Kampot peppers?

Like everything in your spice bag, specific dishes can bring out the best of these peppers.

So, how do you cook Kampot peppercorns?

The more fruit-like notes of the crushed red pepper are ideal for sweeter dessert dishes, while the white’s more subtle flavor is perfect for a soup or a broth, akin to the West African alligator pepper.

Why not even try and season an otherwise boring bowl of mashed potatoes with the white? That subtle hint will thrill and bring a background noise

Kampot black peppercorns are largely used on red meats as a luxurious topping though it’s important to add right at the very end or leave on the side for your guests as, like garlic, it can become rather bitter if overcooked.

Take a peppercorn sauce to the next level with a few of these flavorful bullets or bring smoked, floral tones to balance the saltiness of a fish sauce by using the cracked black pepper.

Coarse black pepper and lime would also make a wonderful topping to grilled chicken or seafood such as crab.

Honestly, the possibilities are endless, even including adding another depth of layer to exotic butter to stuff meat, fish, and whole peppers with. Just imagine how much more interesting a roast chicken would be if the white pepper was perfuming the skin while it cooked?

Or a chicken kiev packed full of garlic butter boasting the citrusy charm of the black peppercorns.

As much of a luxury as these can be, don’t be afraid to sprinkle Kampot peppers on your whole foods.