PEPPER. A well-known spice, of which there are three kinds,—the black, the white, and the long pepper to these we may now add a fourth, bleached pepper, a patent process which the black pepper undergoes in this country to render it white.
Black pepper is cultivated with such success at Malacca, Java, and especially at Sumatra, that from these islands pepper is exported to every part of the world where a regular commerce has been established. The ground chosen for a pepper garden is marked out into regular squares of six feet, the intended distance of the plants, of which there are usually a thousand in each garden. The pepper vines are supported by chinkareens, which are cuttings of a tree of that name planted on purpose. Two vines are usually planted to one chinkareen, round which the vines twist for support. After being suffered to grow for three years, they are cut off about three feet from the ground, and, being loosened from the prop, are bent into the earth in such a manner that the upper end is returned to the root. The fruit, which is produced in long spikes, is four or five months in coming to maturity : the berries are at first green, turn to a bright red when ripe and in perfection, and soon fall off if not gathered in proper time. By drying they become black, and more or less shrivelled, according to their degree of maturity.
The common white pepper is the fruit of the same plant, differently prepared. It is steeped in water, and then exposed to the heat of the sun for several days, till the rind or outer bark loosens ; it is then taken out, and when it is half dry rubbed till the rind falls off; and the white fruit remaining is dried in the sun. A great deal of the heat of the pepper is taken off by this process, so that the white kind is more fit for many.purposes than the black.
The long pepper is a dried fruit, of an inch or an inch and a half in length, and about the thickness of a large goose-quill; it is of a brownish grey colour, cylin drical in figure and said to be produced on a plant of the same genus. It is a native of the East Indies, especially Java, Malabar, and Bengal. This fruit is hottest to the taste in its immature state, and is therefore gathered while green, and dried by the heat of the sun, when it changes to a blackish or dark grey colour. Dr. Cullen observes, that long pepper has precisely the same qualities with those of black, but in a weaker degree.
The method of preparing the bleached pepper appears to be engrossed by Mr. Fulton, of London, who has taken out two patents, one in 1828, the other in 1830. By the specification of the first we are informed that the common black pepper is steeped in water for a day or two, then laid in heaps, and occa sionally turned; fermentation enema, and in a space of time, relying from a week to a month, the outer or black skin bursts and falls offi The pepper is then bleached by oxymuriate of lime, sulphur, or other well-known means. This done, it is washed, and lastly dried in the air, or in an oven. Black pepper thus metamorphosed, so exactly resembles, it is said, the genuine white pepper as to deceive experienced dealers. In the second patent, Mr. Fulton's claim seems to be in the inverse ratio of hie invention ; for he has invented, he says, the iippliestionof-aeoromon groat or barley-mill to the cleansing of pepper from the husks, and he claims the exclusive right to use allsorts of machinery in preparing peer.
The should be upon their guard against the quantities of spurious pepper, both whole and ground: the latter is, of course, easily counterfeited ; but the manufacture of the former is somewhat ingenious. The pepper dust from the sweepings of warehouses is mixed with oll•cake, and rolled up into little balls resembling pepper of, in any body or system of bodies revolving about a point or axis, is that point which, striking an immovable object, the whole mass shall not incline to either side, but rest In erilibrio without acting on the centre of suspension. If a person attempt to stake any object with a straight stick, and do not strike it in the centre of percussion, a considerable jarring will occur, which will not be felt if the blow be given in that point. In a straight dick of equal thickness, the centre of percussion is two-thirds of the length of the stick from the axis of motion. Generally, the 'distance of the centre of percussion from the centre of motion is equal to the sum of the products of each particle of the body, by the square of its distlince, divided by the product of the whole mass by the distance of its centre of gravity from the axis of motion.