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Heritage vs ultra-processed.
Most pantry staples have two versions on the same shelf: the heritage one, with a harvest date and a single village, and the industrial one, blended, irradiated, and often a year or two old. Here is what the difference actually changes.
Lakadong turmeric vs supermarket haldi
Both are turmeric. One carries 7–9% curcumin, single-village provenance and a harvest date you can check. The other is a blend of unknown age, often cut, often irradiated, almost always under 2% curcumin.
Tellicherry pepper vs supermarket black pepper
Tellicherry is graded — the largest, slowest-ripening berries from a small belt in Kerala. Supermarket pepper is the rest of the world's harvest, blended, often pre-ground, often over a year old.
Kashmiri saffron vs supermarket saffron blend
Kashmiri Mongra is the longest, deepest-red, most aromatic saffron grown anywhere. Most supermarket saffron is Iranian style cut with safflower or marigold — and routinely fails ISO 3632 testing.
Heritage garam masala vs store-bought blend
A real garam masala is a region — Punjabi, Bengali, Maharashtrian, Kashmiri. A store blend is a generic, dust-fine, often-stale powder built for shelf life, not for food.
