Banda Islands, Indonesia

Banda Nutmeg

Myristica fragrans

Latin name

yields both nutmeg and mace

Banda Islands

origin archipelago

10 volcanic islands, Maluku, Indonesia

7

years to first fruit

trees productive for 70+ years after

2

spices per fruit

the nut inside + the red aril (mace)

Profile

Nutmeg is the seed, or the ground spice derived from the seed, of several tree species of the genus Myristica; fragrant nutmeg or true nutmeg is a dark-leaved evergreen tree cultivated for two spices derived from its fruit: nutmeg, from its seed, and mace, from the seed covering. It is also a commercial source of nutmeg essential oil and nutmeg butter. The Banda Islands, in Maluku, Indonesia, are the main producer of nutmeg and mace, and the true nutmeg tree is native to the islands.

The Banda Islands — ten small volcanic specks in Indonesia's Maluku archipelago — were the only source of nutmeg in the world until the 1800s. The species, Myristica fragrans, grows on evergreen trees whose apricot-like fruit splits open to reveal a seed wrapped in a crimson aril (mace). The seed is dried for weeks until the kernel rattles inside the shell, then cracked and graded by size. Banda nutmegs are prized for their high essential-oil content and creamy, almost buttery aromatic profile. They go into béchamel, spinach gratin, Italian tortellini, Dutch stamppot, and the Moroccan ras el hanout blend.

Process

01Year 1–7

The young tree waits

Myristica fragrans is planted on Banda's volcanic soil. No fruit for 7 years — growers inter-plant cloves to survive financially during this period.

02Continuous

Year-round harvest

Unlike most spices, nutmeg fruits in two main flushes but year-round. Ripe fruits split open naturally, revealing the scarlet mace-wrapped nut.

03Day 1

Separation

The flesh is discarded for local jams. The scarlet mace aril is peeled from the nut by hand and dried separately — it will become mace.

04Days 2–8

Shell drying

Nuts dry in their hard shell for 6–8 weeks in Banda's sun. The kernel shrinks and rattles inside — the rattle test confirms readiness.

05Your kitchen

Grate fresh, never buy ground

Whole nutmegs keep 4 years. Grate directly onto food — 5–6 passes on a Microplane is enough for most recipes. Never buy pre-ground.

Inside the berry

The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.

Banda nutmeg is the historical reference. Its essential oil (8–15%) is built around myristicin — an alkenylbenzene psychoactive in extreme doses, but a defining warm-sweet note in normal cooking.

12%

Essential oil

average, Banda kernels

2.5%

Myristicin

of dry weight

0.4%

Safrole

regulated trace

9 mo

From flower to nut

fruit ripens slowly

Volatile compound profile

  • Sabinene21.4%

    Peppery-pine — the largest single terpene, gives the green lift.

  • α-pinene18.2%

    Pine, resin — the fresh shoulder of the nutmeg nose.

  • β-pinene13.5%

    Dry pine — supports the resin column.

  • Myristicin8.6%

    Warm, sweet, slightly medicinal — the signature nutmeg note.

  • Limonene5.4%

    Bright citrus — top freshness.

  • Terpinen-4-ol4.8%

    Spicy, woody — adds depth.

  • Elemicin2.3%

    Aromatic-floral — softens myristicin's edge.

Versus other peppers

PepperPiperineOil
Banda (Indonesia)
Maluku · the historical reference, highest oil
8.6%12%
Grenada
Caribbean · slightly fresher, lower myristicin
7.4%10%
Sri Lankan
Matale · less dense, brighter top
6.8%9%
Indian (Kerala)
Western Ghats · smaller kernel
6.1%8%
Papuan
M. argentea · related species, milder
5.8%7.5%

Cuisines

How the world cooks with it.

2 signature dishes

The Dutch built an empire on this nut — and brought it home into every béchamel, stew and stamppot.

  • Stamppotgrade: whole

    Mashed potato with kale or sauerkraut — a fresh grating of nutmeg is non-negotiable.

  • Bitterballengrade: whole

    Crisp veal-ragout croquettes — nutmeg in the roux is the giveaway.

Around the world

What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.

28 languages
🇸🇦 Arabicar

جوز الطيب

Jawz al-tib

🇧🇩 Bengalibn

জায়ফল

Jayphal

🇨🇳 Chinesezh

肉豆蔻

Ròu dòukòu

🇳🇱 Dutchnl

Nootmuskaat

🇬🇧 Englishen

Nutmeg

🇫🇷 Frenchfr

Noix de muscade

🇩🇪 Germande

Muskatnuss

🇮🇱 Hebrewhe

אגוז מוסקט

Egoz muskat

🇮🇳 Hindihi

जायफल

Jaiphal

🇮🇩 Indonesianid

Pala

🇮🇹 Italianit

Noce moscata

🇯🇵 Japaneseja

ナツメグ

Natsumegu

🇰🇷 Koreanko

육두구

Yukdugu

🇲🇾 Malayms

Buah pala

MLml

ജാതിക്ക

Jathikka

🇮🇷 Persianfa

جوز هندی

Jowz-e hendi

🇵🇱 Polishpl

Gałka muszkatołowa

🇵🇹 Portuguesept

Noz-moscada

🇷🇺 Russianru

Мускатный орех

Muskatnyy orekh

SIsi

සාදික්කා

Sadikka

🇪🇸 Spanishes

Nuez moscada

SWsw

Kungumanga

🇸🇪 Swedishsv

Muskotnöt

🇮🇳 Tamilta

ஜாதிக்காய்

Jathikkai

🇹🇭 Thaith

จันทน์เทศ

Chan thet

🇹🇷 Turkishtr

Hindistan cevizi

🇵🇰 Urduur

جائفل

Jaiphal

🇻🇳 Vietnamesevi

Nhục đậu khấu

Pairings

Protein

  • Seared scallops
  • Bisque de homard

Plant

  • Béchamel / gratin

Sweet

  • Eggnog custard
  • Spiced hot chocolate

Drink

  • Warm spiced cider

Substitutes

  • Mace90% match· soon
  • Cassia Cinnamon38% match· soon
  • Ginger30% match· soon

Story

Frequent questions

The Banda Islands in Maluku, Indonesia were the world's only source of nutmeg until the Dutch VOC broke the monopoly in the 17th century. The volcanic soil of islands like Banda Neira and Run gives the nut a richness — higher myristicin content — that Indonesian nutmeg from Sulawesi or Grenada-grown nuts don't fully replicate.