XV. 31. Other classic spices (sumac, bay leaf, dill, tarragon)

XV. 31. Other classic spices (sumac, bay leaf, dill, tarragon)
XV.31.

Other classic spices (sumac, bay leaf, dill, tarragon)

Four classic spices in a brief catalog — Middle Eastern sumac, Mediterranean bay leaf, Hungarian dill, French tarragon.

Function: Brief catalog of 4 classic spicesEvidence: ★★ (variable)Microbiota: indirect polyphenol and essential-oil matricesSource: EMA/HMPC monographs + peer-reviewed RCTs (variable)

Other classic spices in 1 minute

This chapter presents four classic spices in a brief, compact format — each with limited human evidence that does not justify a standalone main chapter, but together they are valuable elements of Mediterranean–Middle Eastern–Hungarian culinary culture. Each detailed description follows the standard chapter structure in miniaturized form.

🍋 Sumac (Rhus coriaria)

Origin: Middle East, Levant, eastern coast of the Mediterranean. One of the main components of the classic Lebanese "za'atar" blend. Ground berries of the tanner-tree family (Anacardiaceae) give a tangy-sour, lemony-flavored powder.

Bioactive profile: Hydrolyzable tannin (gallotannin) 5—15%, anthocyanins (cyanidin glucoside), quercetin, kaempferol, high vitamin C. The ORAC value is among the highest of all spices (Vyas 2024 Foods review).

Clinical evidence: Mohammadi Pour 2019 Phytother Res meta-analysis: sumac 3 g/day for 4—12 weeks — significant blood-sugar reduction (HbA1c −0.5%) in T2D patients. Shidfar 2014 J Res Med Sci showed lipid modulation.

Use: sprinkled on salad (classic "fattoush"), on hummus, on roasted meat, on eggplant. The natural alternative to lemon in eastern Mediterranean cuisine.

Microbiome aspect: indirect polyphenol-tannin matrix with Akkermansia/Lactobacillus support potentially, without human microbiome RCT evidence.

FODMAP: low. Contraindication: close relative of the toxic Rhus toxicodendron (poison ivy) — only from verified sources. Aspirin sensitivity (sumac contains salicylates).

🌿 Bay leaf (Laurus nobilis)

Origin: Mediterranean. The classic "garni" bundle of Greek-Roman cuisine. An essential element of the French "bouquet garni" for soups and stews. Hungarian culinary classic.

Bioactive profile: 1,8-cineole (eucalyptol, 30—50% in the essential oil), linalool, sabinene, α-pinene; quercetin and kaempferol glycosides; fiber.

Clinical evidence: Khan 2009 Eur J Clin Nutr — diabetes RCT with 1—3 g bay leaf/day for 30 days: significant improvement in blood sugar, lipids, and insulin sensitivity in T2D patients. As a spice alone it is not a clinical dose; in capsule or tea form it is meaningful.

Use: for flavoring soups, stews, marinades — during cooking, before consuming the leaf is removed (bloating, allergen risk). The base spice of Hungarian goulash, paprikash, and sour soups.

Microbiome aspect: in vitro antimicrobial — moderate against Helicobacter pylori, Salmonella. Human microbiome RCT evidence is sparse.

FODMAP: green. Contraindication: the whole leaf is NOT eaten — sharp, hard, GI-obstruction risk (especially dangerous for children). Diabetes with insulin pump: bay-leaf tea/capsule can cause hypoglycemia — monitor drug dosing.

🌱 Dill (Anethum graveolens)

Origin: Mediterranean origin, but a classic element of Hungarian, Polish, Russian, and Scandinavian cuisines. The basis of the classic Hungarian "dill curd noodles" and "dill cucumber soup."

Bioactive profile: carvone and limonene (essential oil 60—80%), anethole, quercetin, kaempferol; vitamin A (beta-carotene), vitamin C, magnesium.

Clinical evidence: Sahib 2013 Asian Pac J Trop Biomed — dill extract (kapsa) brought lipid-profile improvement in a small human pilot. Hosseinzadeh 2002 J Ethnopharmacol documented preclinically the traditional antispasmodic claim. Clinical human RCT evidence is modest.

Use: in fresh salad, yogurt-tzatziki, with fish (classic Scandinavian "gravlax"), cucumber salad, fermented pickles. Long cooking removes its aroma — add at the END of cooking.

Microbiome aspect: indirect antimicrobial in vitro; no specific human evidence.

FODMAP: green. Contraindication: rare allergy (Apiaceae family cross-reactivity: celery, carrot, anise). High-dose essential-oil capsule to be avoided in pregnancy (uterotonic potential, weak evidence).

🌾 Tarragon (Artemisia dracunculus)

Origin: Central Asian origin, but an iconic member of the classic French "fines herbes" blend. In Hungarian cuisine — especially the Transylvanian and Upper Hungarian tradition — the basis of the classic "tarragon soup."

Bioactive profile: "French tarragon" (A. dracunculus sativa) has high estragole (60—80% of essential oil), high linalool. "Russian tarragon" (A. dracunculus inodora) has substantially lower estragole content, weaker flavor, safer. Quercetin, kaempferol, rutin in the polyphenol fraction.

Clinical evidence: Méndez-del Villar 2016 J Med Food — tarragon extract (Tarralin®) 1000 mg/day, 90 days, in prediabetic patients: significant improvement in blood sugar and insulin sensitivity. Clinical human evidence is at low dose, with few RCTs.

Use: chicken, fish, egg dishes, sauces (béarnaise!), salad dressings, classic "tarragon chicken soup." Fresh tarragon gives maximum aroma with brief cooking.

Microbiome aspect: no direct human evidence; moderate in vitro antimicrobial.

FODMAP: green. Contraindication — CRITICAL: estragole is genotoxic + carcinogenic in animal models (EFSA 2009 assessment). High-dose supplement long-term TO BE AVOIDED. Dietary spice amount (1—2 g fresh, 0.5 g dried) is safe. High-dose capsule to be avoided in pregnancy.

📚 References (selected)

Sumac:

  1. Vyas N et al. Sumac (Rhus coriaria L.): a multi-bioactive food spice — review. Foods 2024;13(11):1675.
  2. Mohammadi Pour P et al. The clinical effects of Rhus coriaria (sumac) on metabolic biomarkers — meta-analysis. Phytother Res 2019;33(8):1900—1916.
  3. Shidfar F et al. The effects of Rhus coriaria L. (sumac) on lipid profile and inflammatory markers in patients with type 2 diabetes. J Res Med Sci 2014;19(10):933—938.

Bay leaf:

  1. Khan A et al. Bay leaves improve glucose and lipid profile of people with type 2 diabetes. Eur J Clin Nutr 2009;63(3):319—324. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19177188/
  2. EMA/HMPC. Laurus nobilis L., folium — assessment report. 2017.

Dill:

  1. Sahib AS et al. Effects of Anethum graveolens on lipid profile in hypercholesterolemic patients. Asian Pac J Trop Biomed 2013;3(11):902—905.
  2. Jana S, Shekhawat GS. Anethum graveolens: an Indian traditional medicinal herb — review. Pharmacogn Rev 2010;4(8):179—184.
  3. EMA/HMPC. Anethum graveolens L., fructus — herbal monograph. 2015.

Tarragon:

  1. Méndez-del Villar M et al. Effect of Artemisia dracunculus on glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes — RCT. J Med Food 2016;19(5):484—490.
  2. EFSA. Compendium of botanicals reported to contain naturally occurring substances of possible concern for human health — estragole assessment. EFSA Journal 2009.
  3. EMA/HMPC. Artemisia dracunculus L., herba — herbal monograph (preliminary). 2018.

General:

  1. USDA FoodData Central — Sumac NDB #02038; Bay leaves NDB #02004; Dill NDB #02045; Tarragon NDB #02064.
  2. Monash University. Sumac, bay leaves, dill, tarragon — Low FODMAP serving guidance.