cubeb - meaning and definition. What is cubeb
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What (who) is cubeb - definition

SPECIES OF PLANT
Java pepper; Tailed pepper; Cubebs; Cubebin; Oleum cubebae; Cubebae; Cubebeira; Cubeb cigarette; Cubeb cigarettes; Cubeb Oil; Java Pepper; Tailed Pepper; Cubeb pepper; Cubeb; Kabab chini; Kebab chini
  • A Victorian advertisement for ''Dr. Perrin's Medicated Cubeb Cigarettes''
  • John Varvatos Vintage uses cubeb as one of the ingredients for fragrance.
  • ''Piper cubeba'', from ''[[Köhler's Medicinal Plants]]'' (1887)
  • Chemical structure of α-cubebene

Cubeb         
·noun The small, spicy berry of a species of pepper (Piper Cubeba; in med., Cubeba officinalis), native in Java and Borneo, but now cultivated in various tropical countries. The dried unripe fruit is much used in medicine as a stimulant and purgative.
cubeb         
['kju:b?b]
¦ noun
1. a tropical shrub of the pepper family, which bears pungent berries. [Piper cubeba (Asia) and other species.]
2. the dried unripe berries of the cubeb, used medicinally and to flavour cigarettes.
Origin
ME: from OFr. cubebe, from Sp. Arab. kubeba, from Arab. kubaba.
cubeb         
n.
Java pepper (Piper cubeba), cubeb-pepper.

Wikipedia

Piper cubeba

Piper cubeba, cubeb or tailed pepper is a plant in genus Piper, cultivated for its fruit and essential oil. It is mostly grown in Java and Sumatra, hence sometimes called Java pepper. The fruits are gathered before they are ripe, and carefully dried. Commercial cubeb consists of the dried berries, similar in appearance to black pepper, but with stalks attached – the "tails" in "tailed pepper". The dried pericarp is wrinkled, and its color ranges from grayish brown to black. The seed is hard, white and oily. The odor of cubeb is described as agreeable and aromatic and the taste as pungent, acrid, slightly bitter and persistent. It has been described as tasting like allspice, or like a cross between allspice and black pepper.

Cubeb came to Europe via India through the trade with the Arabs. The name cubeb comes from Arabic kabāba (كبابة) by way of Old French quibibes. Cubeb is mentioned in alchemical writings by its Arabic name. In his Theatrum Botanicum, John Parkinson tells that the king of Portugal (Possibly either Philip IV of Spain or John IV of Portugal, as that year was marked by the start of the Portuguese Restoration War) prohibited the sale of cubeb to promote black pepper (Piper nigrum) around 1640. It experienced a brief resurgence in 19th-century Europe for medicinal uses, but has practically vanished from the European market since. It continues to be used as a flavoring agent for gins and cigarettes in the West, and as a seasoning for food in Indonesia.