Black Cardamom Recipes · BBQ & Grilling

Black Cardamom BBQ Rub

A smoky dry rub with one upgrade no pitmaster blog covers — freshly ground black cardamom. Brown sugar base, smoked paprika, coarse black pepper, and a camphor-smoke spice that makes the bark taste like more wood was in the smoker than actually was.

🥩 Brisket 🍖 Ribs 🐷 Pork Shoulder 🍗 Chicken 🦐 Seafood
Prep Time10 min
Cook Time0 min
Total10 min
Yield¾ cup
Shelf Life4–6 weeks
Black Cardamom1 pod
📅 Published: April 29, 2026 🔄 Updated: April 29, 2026 ✅ Fact-checked by Dr. Michael Bennett
Emily Rhodes culinary writer
Written by Emily Rhodes Covers South Asian spice culture and kitchen science. Market visits to Kerala, Karachi, and Dubai.
Dr Michael Bennett food scientist
Reviewed by Dr. Michael Bennett Specialist in volatile oil composition and spice phytochemistry. All technical claims peer-reviewed.
Quick Answer

What is a BBQ Dry Rub?

A BBQ dry rub is a blend of spices and sugar applied to raw meat before smoking or grilling. The rub creates bark — the dark, firm crust on the exterior of smoked meat formed by Maillard browning of the sugar and protein in the rub. This recipe adds one ingredient that standard dry rub blends miss: freshly ground black cardamom, whose camphor and cineole volatile compounds survive the heat of smoking and add a resinous wood-smoke depth to the bark that the wood chips alone cannot provide.

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Why Black Cardamom Makes a Better BBQ Rub

Every BBQ rub recipe on the internet covers the same variables: brown sugar ratio, smoked paprika intensity, how much cayenne. None of them mention black cardamom. That is not because it doesn’t belong — it is because the Western BBQ community and the South Asian spice world have rarely overlapped in print. Black cardamom (badi elaichi) is the spice used across Mughal, Pakistani, and Vietnamese cooking to add camphor-forward wood-smoke depth to slow-cooked broth and meat. Those same volatile compounds — cineole and camphor — are heat-stable enough to survive a 12-hour smoke on a brisket and end up in the bark.

The result in a BBQ context is this: the bark tastes like it came from a more heavily smoked environment than it did. The resinous, slightly mentholated camphor note from black cardamom pairs with the Maillard caramelisation of the brown sugar and smoked paprika, producing a complex bark profile that experienced BBQ eaters will notice immediately. One pod, freshly ground, is all this recipe requires — it is 10% of the spice blend by volume but contributes an outsized flavour impact. For the chemistry behind why black cardamom’s compounds are so distinctive, see our green vs black cardamom guide.

This rub is designed for low-and-slow smoking — brisket, pork shoulder, spare ribs. It also works on chicken, lamb leg, and even salmon on the grill. The sugar-to-spice ratio is calibrated for a 120–150°C (250–300°F) smoking environment. For high-heat grilling above 200°C (400°F), reduce brown sugar by half to prevent burning — instructions on this are in the steps section. If you want to apply this rub concept to a braised short rib recipe, see our upcoming spiced short ribs article.

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How Bark Forms — The Science Behind the Crust

Understanding bark formation helps you apply and use this rub more effectively.

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Maillard Reaction + Caramelisation
Bark forms from two chemical reactions happening simultaneously on the meat surface. The Maillard reaction between amino acids and reducing sugars in the rub creates hundreds of complex flavour compounds — the same chemistry as searing a steak. Caramelisation of the brown sugar produces furans and pyrazines — the toasty, caramel notes in a good bark. Both require sustained heat above 140°C (284°F) to proceed.
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What Black Cardamom Adds to Bark
Black cardamom’s camphor and cineole volatile compounds are heat-stable up to approximately 180°C (356°F) — well within the smoking temperature range. They integrate into the bark during the long Maillard process, adding a resinous, slightly mentholated smoke note that wood chips alone do not produce. In effect, the rub provides chemical smoke on top of the physical smoke from the wood. This is why the bark tastes more smoked than the process alone would suggest.
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Surface Drying — Why It Matters
A dry meat surface is essential for bark formation. Wet surface moisture evaporates at 100°C (212°F), which keeps the meat surface temperature below the Maillard threshold until all surface moisture is gone. Patting the meat dry before applying rub, then refrigerating uncovered overnight, accelerates this drying. The overnight dry brine (rub on, uncovered in refrigerator) also allows the salt to begin osmotic seasoning before any heat is applied.
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Sugar: Low & Slow vs High Heat
Brown sugar in BBQ rubs caramelises beautifully at 120–150°C (250–300°F) smoking temperatures. Above 170°C (340°F) it burns, producing bitter acrolein compounds that make the bark taste harsh. For low-and-slow smoking: use the full sugar quantity. For high-heat grilling above 200°C (400°F): reduce brown sugar by half or substitute with a small amount of honey applied in the last 5 minutes of cooking rather than in the rub.
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Black cardamom BBQ dry rub in mason jar with measuring spoon — dark smoky spice blend
Black Cardamom BBQ Dry Rub

Smoky BBQ rub anchored by freshly ground black cardamom — the camphor-smoke spice that makes this rub taste like a real pitmaster made it. Brown sugar base, smoked paprika, coarse black pepper.

Prep10 min
Cook0 min
Total10 min
Yield~¾ cup
Shelf Life4–6 weeks
Black Cardamom1 pod
★★★★★4.9 / 5 — based on 178 ratings
The 12 Ingredients
Black Cardamom ×1 Brown SugarSmoked Paprika Kosher SaltBlack Pepper Garlic PowderOnion Powder CuminMustard Powder CayenneCoriander Chipotle (optional)

Rub Guide by Meat Type

Application amount, cook method, and adjustments for each protein type.

MeatRub AmountBest MethodSugar AdjustmentRating
Beef Brisket1.5 tbsp per lb · coat all surfacesLow & slow smoke 110–135°C · 10–14 hrsFull sugar amount — caramelises beautifullyBest Use
Pork Ribs (spare/baby back)1 tbsp per lb · all surfaces incl. bone sideSmoke at 120–135°C · 5–6 hrs (spare) / 4–5 hrs (baby back)Full sugar — pork fat renders slowly, prevents burningBest Use
Pork Shoulder / Pulled Pork1.5 tbsp per lb · penetrate scored fat capSmoke at 120°C · 10–14 hrs to 95°C internalFull sugar — long cook at low temp is idealBest Use
Chicken (whole / halved)1 tbsp per lb · under skin + surfaceSmoke at 150°C · 2.5–3 hrs or grill indirectReduce sugar by 25% — chicken skin chars fasterGood
Beef Short Ribs1 tbsp per lb · thick coat on meat sideSmoke at 135°C · 8–10 hrs or braise-finishFull sugar — fatty cut handles the heat wellBest Use
Salmon / Firm Fish½ tbsp per lb · light coat onlyHigh-heat grill or cedar plank smokeReduce sugar by 50% · fish chars fast at high heatWorks Well
Lamb Leg / Shoulder1 tbsp per lb · into any scored cutsLow smoke or oven-roast at 150°CFull sugar — the black cardamom + lamb pairing is exceptionalBest Use
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Ingredients

Yields ¾ cup · Enough for 2kg brisket or 2 full racks of ribs

⭐ The Key Spice — Grind Fresh
1 pod
Black Cardamom — seeds only, freshly ground
crack pod · extract seeds · discard husk · grind fresh · camphor-smoke compound that makes this rub unique 🛒 Buy Black Cardamom Pods on Amazon →
Sweet & Smoke Base
3 tbsp
Brown sugar (packed) dark brown for deeper caramel · reduce by half for high-heat grilling
2 tbsp
Smoked paprika not regular paprika — smoked is essential for colour and smoke note
Salt, Heat & Savory
1 tbsp
Kosher salt coarse kosher · not table salt — better distribution
1 tbsp
Coarse black pepper freshly cracked preferred
½ tsp
Cayenne pepper adjust to heat preference
Aromatic & Depth Layer
1 tbsp
Garlic powder powder not granulated — distributes evenly
1 tsp
Onion powder
1 tsp
Cumin ground · adds earthy warmth
1 tsp
Mustard powder helps rub bind to meat surface
½ tsp
Ground coriander citrusy background note
Optional — Enhanced Smoke
½ tsp
Chipotle powder adds extra heat + smokiness · skip for a milder rub
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Missing a Spice? Find Your Substitute

Select what you’re out of — get exact swap quantities.

✓ No Black Cardamom

Substitute: Add ¼ tsp extra smoked paprika + ⅛ tsp ground allspice. This approximates some of the warm, resinous quality of black cardamom without the camphor-smoke note specifically.

Impact: The rub will be an excellent standard BBQ rub — just without the distinctive camphor depth that sets this recipe apart. Source it for next batch — one pod goes a long way →

✓ No Smoked Paprika

Substitute: Use regular paprika (same amount) + ¼ tsp chipotle powder for the smoke note. The colour will be slightly less vivid and the smoke note less prominent, but the rub will still work well.

Note: Do not use hot paprika instead of smoked — the flavour is completely different. Smoked paprika (pimentón) is essential to this rub’s base character.

✓ No Mustard Powder

Substitute: Apply a thin coat of yellow mustard directly to the meat as a binder before adding the rub — this replaces both the binder function and the mustard flavour contribution. The mustard taste cooks off completely during the long smoke.

Impact: Minor. Mustard powder primarily helps the rub adhere and adds a subtle savory background — either of the above methods covers this adequately.

✓ No Cayenne Pepper

Substitute: Use ¼ tsp white pepper + ¼ tsp chilli powder blend as a milder heat replacement. Alternatively, omit entirely for a heat-free family-friendly rub — the black cardamom and smoked paprika carry the depth without the heat.

Note: Do not substitute hot sauce — liquid ingredients disrupt the dry rub consistency and prevent proper bark formation.

✓ No Brown Sugar

Substitute: Use coconut sugar (same amount) — similar caramelisation properties with a slightly more complex flavour. White sugar works but produces less depth. For a sugar-free rub: increase smoked paprika by 1 tbsp and add ½ tsp of espresso powder — this helps with bark formation and browning without sugar.

Impact: Significant for bark formation — sugar is a key driver of Maillard browning on the meat surface. A sugar-free rub produces a less substantial bark, though the flavour of the remaining spices will still be good.

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Step-by-Step Instructions

5 steps · 10 minutes · Mix-only recipe — no cooking required

  1. All BBQ dry rub spices measured into individual bowls including black cardamom pod before mixing
    1

    Measure All Spices Before Starting

    Measure every ingredient into individual small bowls or onto a plate before you begin mixing. For black cardamom: crack the pod with the flat of a knife, open it, and extract the small black seeds inside — you need the seeds, not the outer grey-brown husk. Measure approximately 1 tsp of seeds. This gives you a clear visual check that all 12 components are present and correctly proportioned before they’re combined.

    💡 Why this matters
    Measuring before mixing prevents the most common dry rub error — discovering you’re out of a key ingredient after you’ve already combined everything else. It also gives you a chance to smell each spice individually and verify freshness. A spice that doesn’t smell like itself when opened has lost most of its volatile oils and should be replaced.
  2. Black cardamom seeds being freshly ground in electric spice grinder for BBQ rub
    2

    Grind Black Cardamom Seeds Fresh

    Add the extracted black cardamom seeds to a spice grinder or mortar and pestle. Grind to a fine powder — 15–20 seconds in an electric grinder, or 2–3 minutes of sustained grinding in a mortar. The powder should have no visible seed pieces remaining. Smell it immediately after grinding — you will notice a distinctly smoky, camphor-forward aroma unlike anything in a standard spice rack. This freshly ground powder is the reason this rub is different.

    💡 Why this matters
    Pre-ground black cardamom powder, if you can find it at all, has typically lost 60–80% of its volatile camphor and cineole compounds within weeks of grinding. Freshly ground from whole seeds has full potency. The difference in aroma is immediately obvious — the fresh-ground version smells like a wood-smoke fireplace; the stale pre-ground version smells faintly of sawdust. Always grind from whole pods for this recipe.
  3. All BBQ dry rub spices being combined and whisked together in large mixing bowl
    3

    Combine All Ingredients and Whisk

    Add all measured spices, including the freshly ground black cardamom, to a medium bowl. Whisk for 30–45 seconds until fully and uniformly combined — break up any brown sugar clumps with the back of a spoon if needed. To check distribution: spread a thin layer on a white plate and look for even colour throughout with no visible clumps of any single ingredient. Taste a pinch — this is the moment to adjust. Want more heat: add ¼ tsp cayenne. Want sweeter: add ½ tsp brown sugar. More smoke: add ¼ tsp chipotle.

    💡 Why this matters
    Brown sugar clumps cause uneven coverage when applied to meat — a clump of pure sugar on a section of brisket will burn before surrounding areas caramelise. Thorough mixing and breaking down all clumps ensures even bark formation across the entire meat surface. Tasting the raw rub is also the most efficient way to adjust seasoning — it tastes 30–40% less intense on meat than it does raw, so the raw pinch should taste slightly aggressive.
  4. Black cardamom BBQ rub being applied generously to raw brisket with hands pressing into surface
    4

    Apply to Meat — Pat Dry First, Press In Firmly

    Pat meat completely dry with paper towels — all surfaces, including sides and fat cap. Optional but recommended: apply a thin, even coat of yellow mustard or olive oil as a binder to all surfaces. Apply the rub generously to all surfaces — 1–1.5 tablespoons per pound of meat. Press the rub in using your palm — do not just sprinkle and walk away. For the overnight method: place rubbed meat on a wire rack over a baking tray, refrigerate uncovered 8–12 hours. For immediate cook: let rest at room temperature 30–45 minutes after applying rub.

    💡 Why this matters
    Pressing rather than sprinkling improves rub adhesion and ensures direct contact between the spice particles and the meat surface — both necessary for proper Maillard browning. The overnight dry brine (rub on, uncovered refrigerator) allows the salt in the rub to draw moisture to the surface, dissolve, and osmotically reabsorb — seasoning the meat 5–8mm deep rather than surface-only. This is what professional BBQ competitors do as standard practice.
  5. Remaining black cardamom BBQ dry rub stored in sealed glass mason jar labelled with date
    5

    Store in Airtight Glass — Not Plastic

    Transfer remaining rub to a completely dry glass jar with an airtight lid. Label with the date. Store away from heat, light, and humidity. The freshly ground black cardamom note fades fastest — this rub is at peak intensity for 4–6 weeks. After 8 weeks, the camphor note will have largely dissipated though the rub remains functional. For batches used regularly: grind a larger quantity of black cardamom seeds and store separately as a spice, adding 1 tsp to fresh batches of the rub base as needed.

    💡 Why this matters
    Plastic containers are permeable to the volatile aromatic compounds that give this rub its character — black cardamom camphor, smoked paprika pimentol, and mustard volatile oils all slowly permeate through plastic walls. Glass is impermeable. A rub stored in a lidded glass jar in a dark cupboard retains peak character for 4–6 weeks; the same rub in plastic starts degrading within 2 weeks of grinding the black cardamom.
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Rub Variations for Different Styles

Start with the base recipe and modify for these specific applications.

Texas Brisket Style
Salt + Pepper Forward
Increase kosher salt to 2 tbsp, increase coarse black pepper to 2 tbsp, reduce brown sugar to 1 tbsp. Classic Central Texas ratio — the black cardamom adds complexity without competing with the salt-pepper dominance.
Competition Pork Ribs
Sweet + Spicy
Increase brown sugar to 4 tbsp, add 1 tsp cinnamon, increase cayenne to 1 tsp. Competition-style ribs lean sweeter — the extra cinnamon complements the black cardamom’s resinous note beautifully on pork fat.
Chicken & Poultry
Lighter Profile
Reduce brown sugar to 1.5 tbsp, add 1 tsp dried thyme and ½ tsp lemon zest powder. Chicken has less fat to protect the rub — a lighter profile prevents over-charring and the herb addition complements white meat.
Lamb Rub
Mediterranean
Add 1 tsp ground cumin extra, 1 tsp za’atar, reduce smoked paprika to 1 tbsp. Lamb and black cardamom are a natural pairing — the camphor note mirrors the characteristic lamb aroma rather than competing with it.
No-Sugar Version
Keto / Low-Carb
Remove all brown sugar. Add 1 tbsp extra smoked paprika + ½ tsp espresso powder + ½ tsp ground allspice. The espresso aids Maillard browning on the bark surface — the result is darker and slightly more bitter but still excellent.
Coffee + Cardamom
Dark & Complex
Add 1 tbsp finely ground espresso to the base recipe. Coffee + black cardamom is a classic flavour combination across Middle Eastern and Ethiopian cuisine — on a brisket bark this combination produces an exceptional dark, complex crust.
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Expert Tips

What Makes Competition Bark vs Home Bark

Perfect BBQ brisket bark formed with black cardamom dry rub — dark mahogany crust
The Overnight Dry Brine is Not Optional

Most home cooks apply rub and put meat directly on the smoker. Competition cooks apply rub 8–12 hours in advance, refrigerate uncovered, and start cooking from cold. The osmotic seasoning cycle that happens overnight — salt draws moisture out, dissolves, reabsorbs — produces a measurably more seasoned result than a 30-minute application. The uncovered refrigeration also dries the surface, which promotes faster bark formation when the meat hits the smoker. Make a habit of this one change and your BBQ output will improve immediately.

BBQ rub being applied to pork ribs before smoking — pressing firmly into meat surface
Press In — Don’t Sprinkle On

The physical contact between rub and meat surface is what produces bark. Sprinkled rub that sits on top without adhesion will fall off when the meat contracts during cooking — leaving bare patches with no bark. Press firmly with your palm across all surfaces after applying. For large cuts like a whole brisket: use a cupped hand to apply from above and then press the rub into the meat with your palm moving in circles. Every surface including the sides and fat cap must be coated.

Freshly ground black cardamom seeds for BBQ rub — superior to pre-ground stale spice
Grind Fresh — Pre-Ground Is Not the Same

The single most important quality decision in this recipe is grinding the black cardamom fresh from whole seeds. Pre-ground black cardamom, if you can find it, has lost the majority of its camphor and cineole compounds within 4–8 weeks of grinding. The freshly ground version produces a distinctly smoky, camphor-forward aroma that you can smell from across the kitchen. That aroma is what ends up in the bark. Buy whole pods, store them sealed, and grind fresh for each batch of rub. See our buying guide for sourcing.

BBQ rub applied brisket dry brining overnight in refrigerator on wire rack before smoking
Manage Temperature to Protect the Sugar

Sugar in BBQ rubs is a double-edged tool. At 120–150°C (250–300°F) it caramelises and produces the signature golden-mahogany bark colour. Above 170°C (340°F) it burns, producing harsh bitter compounds and a blackened, unpleasant bark. Keep your smoker temperature stable in the 120–135°C range for the first half of the cook. If you spritz meat with apple juice or water during the cook, do it every 90 minutes maximum — frequent spritzing introduces surface moisture that delays bark formation significantly.

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Difficulty Level & Time Breakdown

Beginner
Difficulty Rating1 / 5
🌶🌶🌶🌶🌶
Time Breakdown (Rub Only)
Measuring spices4 min
Grinding black cardamom2 min
Combining + whisking2 min
Applying to meat3 min
Storing remainder1 min
Total hands-on~12 min
Skill Requirements
Can operate a spice grinder or mortar and pestle
Can measure spices accurately by tablespoon
Has or can access a smoker, grill, or oven
Can manage low-and-slow cooking temperature (separate to this recipe)
Who is this for?
This is the most accessible recipe on the site — 12 minutes of mixing and you have a professional-quality spice rub. The difficulty of the final dish depends on your cook method (smoking, grilling, or oven), not on the rub itself. A first-time BBQ cook can make this rub perfectly on the first attempt. The only critical skill is obtaining a spice grinder and using fresh black cardamom pods — everything else is measuring and mixing.
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Frequently Asked Questions

What does black cardamom do in a BBQ rub?+
Black cardamom adds a deep camphor-smoke note to BBQ rubs that no other spice replicates. Its volatile compounds — cineole and camphor — survive the high heat of smoking and grilling, adding a resinous wood-smoke quality underneath the sweet-salty-spicy profile of a standard BBQ rub. The effect is subtle but measurable: the bark tastes more smoked than the process alone would suggest. It is the signature spice in this recipe and the reason experienced BBQ cooks will notice something different about it.
How much BBQ rub per pound of meat?+
General guideline: 1 tablespoon of dry rub per pound (450g) for moderate coating. For a heavier bark on brisket or pork shoulder: 1.5 tablespoons per pound. For ribs: apply generously to all surfaces including the bone side. For chicken: 1 tablespoon per pound — chicken skin chars faster with too much sugar in the rub. The rub should visibly coat all surfaces with no bare patches.
Should I use a binder before applying dry rub?+
A binder helps the rub adhere and does not significantly change flavour. The most common options are yellow mustard (traditional for brisket and pork — the vinegar and mustard flavour cooks off completely during the long smoke), olive oil, and Worcestershire sauce. You can also skip the binder if the meat surface has any natural moisture — the rub will still adhere adequately when pressed firmly.
Should I remove the sugar from BBQ rub for high-heat grilling?+
Yes. Brown sugar burns above 170°C (340°F), producing bitter flavour. For low-and-slow smoking at 120–150°C — brisket, pork shoulder, ribs — keep the full sugar amount. For high-heat grilling above 200°C — steaks, chicken breasts — reduce brown sugar by half or eliminate it entirely. The black cardamom and spice profile remain fully effective at all temperatures — only the sugar-derived bark character changes.
How long should dry rub sit on meat before cooking?+
Minimum 30 minutes, ideal 8–12 hours refrigerated (overnight dry brine). The salt in the rub draws moisture to the surface through osmosis, which then dissolves and reabsorbs into the meat — a natural brining process that seasons 5–8mm deep into the muscle. The overnight method produces noticeably more seasoned, juicier meat. Place rubbed meat uncovered on a wire rack over a tray in the refrigerator — the airflow dries the surface slightly, which promotes better bark formation during cooking.
What is bark on BBQ meat and how does dry rub affect it?+
Bark is the dark, firm crust on the exterior of smoked meat — formed by Maillard browning of the sugars and proteins in the rub with the meat surface, combined with drying from the smoke environment. A well-formed bark has a texture between crunchy and chewy and concentrates the most intense flavour in the entire cook. The black cardamom in this rub contributes camphor and cineole volatile compounds that integrate into the bark during the long Maillard process — giving it a resinous smokiness that wood smoke alone cannot produce.
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About the Authors
Emily Rhodes culinary writer at CardamomNectar
Written by
Emily Rhodes
Culinary Writer & Spice Researcher

Emily covers South Asian spice culture, recipe development, and market sourcing. She has visited spice markets in Kerala, Karachi, and Dubai and writes all recipe content on CardamomNectar. Her approach prioritises kitchen science — the why behind technique — and sourcing accuracy grounded in direct market experience.

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Dr Michael Bennett food scientist at CardamomNectar
Reviewed by
Dr. Michael Bennett
Food Scientist & Phytochemist

Dr. Bennett reviews all scientific and technical content on CardamomNectar. He verified the claims in this article on camphor and cineole heat stability at BBQ temperatures, the Maillard reaction mechanism in bark formation, and the osmotic salt penetration timelines during overnight dry brining.

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