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Badia Star Anise Spice, 7 oz

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Badia Star Anise Spice, 7 oz

Star anise is the eight-pointed pod that defines Chinese and Vietnamese cooking — sweet, licorice-deep, and unmistakably aromatic. It's one of the five spices in Chinese five-spice powder and the single most important note in a proper bowl of pho broth.

Common Uses

Toast and simmer into pho bo or pho ga alongside cinnamon, clove, and charred ginger. Essential in Chinese red-braised pork belly (hong shao rou), tea eggs, and master stocks for soy-braised duck. Steep into mulled wine and chai, infuse into poaching liquid for pears, or grind into rubs for roast duck and five-spice ribs.

Cuisine Context

Vietnamese pho cooks measure pho by the pod — too few and the broth is thin, too many and it turns medicinal. In Chinese home cooking it's the spice that signals a long braise is underway, and in Taiwanese kitchens it's the foundation of beef noodle soup. Whole pods only; the shape carries the flavor.

Pro Tip

Toast the pods dry in the pot for 30 seconds before adding liquid. The heat releases anethole, the same compound in fennel and licorice, and turns a thin broth into one with real depth.

Ships from Doral, FL.

$6.52

Original: $18.63

-65%
Badia Star Anise Spice, 7 oz—

$18.63

$6.52

Product Information

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Description

Star anise is the eight-pointed pod that defines Chinese and Vietnamese cooking — sweet, licorice-deep, and unmistakably aromatic. It's one of the five spices in Chinese five-spice powder and the single most important note in a proper bowl of pho broth.

Common Uses

Toast and simmer into pho bo or pho ga alongside cinnamon, clove, and charred ginger. Essential in Chinese red-braised pork belly (hong shao rou), tea eggs, and master stocks for soy-braised duck. Steep into mulled wine and chai, infuse into poaching liquid for pears, or grind into rubs for roast duck and five-spice ribs.

Cuisine Context

Vietnamese pho cooks measure pho by the pod — too few and the broth is thin, too many and it turns medicinal. In Chinese home cooking it's the spice that signals a long braise is underway, and in Taiwanese kitchens it's the foundation of beef noodle soup. Whole pods only; the shape carries the flavor.

Pro Tip

Toast the pods dry in the pot for 30 seconds before adding liquid. The heat releases anethole, the same compound in fennel and licorice, and turns a thin broth into one with real depth.

Ships from Doral, FL.

Badia Star Anise Spice, 7 oz | Bodega Badia