i Register
In some senses, spicer is marked as obsolete, historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.
VERB + SPICER
box
SPICER + NOUN
assay, pepperer
noun
One who seasons with spice.
And finally, at end of a banquet when candied spices were served, the First Chamberlain handed the dragée box to the Spicer for an assay, and then passed it to the senior person of the Duke's Houshold present; this person presented the box to the Prince, and then returned it to the First Chamberlain, who in turn replaced it into the hands of the Spicer - always assuming this last person to have survived the earlier assay of his product!
[…] they [professional cooks] had as many as 25 helpers, such as saucerers, larders, roasters, pottagers, bakers, spicers, and fruiterers, not to mention spit turners and scullions.
That which adds spice or (figurative) excitement.
There are only 13 plots […] and a limited number of story spicers — deception, mistaken identity, unnatural affection […]
In Europe cloves from the Indonesian archipelago were prized as a medicine, especially for toothache, as well as a spicer of food and drink.
A spice dealer.
The pepperers, spicers, &c. afterwards went to Bucklersbury, where they sold their commodities in the open air.
In the same place, under the same date, occurs the other of the extinct company of spicers […]
name
A surname originating as an occupation for a spice dealer.
A city in Kandiyohi County, Minnesota, United States, named after landowner John M. Spicer.
And finally, at end of a banquet when candied spices were served, the First Chamberlain handed the dragée box to the Spicer for an assay, and then passed it to the senior person of the Duke's Houshold
Wiktionary[…] they [professional cooks] had as many as 25 helpers, such as saucerers, larders, roasters, pottagers, bakers, spicers, and fruiterers, not to mention spit turners and scullions.
WiktionaryIn Britain in the Middle Ages every Royal palace and great household had a Spicer or Pepperer.
Wiktionaryi Register
In some senses, spicer is marked as obsolete, historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.