comma

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Maybo

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Why is a comma not needed after spiced in the following sentence?

Rice and meat - the former, delicately spiced and the latter, robustly flavoured - are cooked separately and then together, slowly on a low flame, in layers separated by juicy fried onions, saffron-infused milk and fresh herbs.

(
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I would use no commas at all between the dashes.
If all commas are removed between the dashes, should I write "the former delicately spiced and the latter robustly flavoured" or "the former is delicately spiced and the latter is robustly flavoured"? Or both are acceptable?
 
Can I rewrite like these?:

1. Rice, delicately spiced and meat, robustly flavoured, are cooked separately and...
2. Rice, delicately spiced and meat, robustly flavoured - are cooked separately and...
 
You can, if you wish.

The finished dish will taste exactly the same. ;-)
 
Can I rewrite like these?:

1. Rice, delicately spiced and meat, robustly flavoured, are cooked separately and...
2. Rice, delicately spiced and meat, robustly flavoured - are cooked separately and...

NOT A TEACHER

I would write "Rice (delicately spiced) and meat (robustly flavored) are cooked separately and ...."

By the way, I believe that here in the States, writers prefer one short line for a hyphen ("A twenty-year-old student") and two short lines for a dash ("French -- like English today -- was once the international (global) language."
 
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