Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb

<p>Sweet basil (<em>Ocimum basilicum</em>&nbsp;L.), of the Lamiaceae family, has long been a popular culinary and medicinal herb. However, the composition of the essential oil varies markedly between different varieties, meaning that the aroma/flavour profile can also vary sign...

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Main Author: Spence, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024
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author Spence, C
author_facet Spence, C
author_sort Spence, C
collection OXFORD
description <p>Sweet basil (<em>Ocimum basilicum</em>&nbsp;L.), of the Lamiaceae family, has long been a popular culinary and medicinal herb. However, the composition of the essential oil varies markedly between different varieties, meaning that the aroma/flavour profile can also vary significantly from one cultivar or hybrid to the next. Some of the key aromatic volatiles in basil essential oil include eugenol, methyl eugenol, linalool, methyl chavicol (also known as estragole), and methyl cinnamate. As highlighted by this narrative historical review, while fresh basil is nowadays often associated with tomato-based dishes and sauces in Italian cuisine, it was rarely used as a culinary herb in countries such as the US, Britain, or even, in fact, Italy prior to the twentieth century. The herb is consumed fresh, dried (though lacking the perfumed top notes), and as a paste (i.e., in the Mediterranean pesto and pistou). Sweet basil may also be one of the few herbs/spices to have been integrated into cuisine simply because it tastes good (i.e., because of its highly-pleasant aromatic flavour profile). There are also a number of important non-culinary uses for basil, based on its highly fragrant aroma, not to mention its antimicrobial properties, including in a ritualistic setting in countries such as Greece and Bulgaria.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:917d15bf-fa8e-4aa9-8334-e4e0119e167c2024-04-24T14:23:04ZSweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herbJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:917d15bf-fa8e-4aa9-8334-e4e0119e167cEnglishSymplectic ElementsElsevier2024Spence, C<p>Sweet basil (<em>Ocimum basilicum</em>&nbsp;L.), of the Lamiaceae family, has long been a popular culinary and medicinal herb. However, the composition of the essential oil varies markedly between different varieties, meaning that the aroma/flavour profile can also vary significantly from one cultivar or hybrid to the next. Some of the key aromatic volatiles in basil essential oil include eugenol, methyl eugenol, linalool, methyl chavicol (also known as estragole), and methyl cinnamate. As highlighted by this narrative historical review, while fresh basil is nowadays often associated with tomato-based dishes and sauces in Italian cuisine, it was rarely used as a culinary herb in countries such as the US, Britain, or even, in fact, Italy prior to the twentieth century. The herb is consumed fresh, dried (though lacking the perfumed top notes), and as a paste (i.e., in the Mediterranean pesto and pistou). Sweet basil may also be one of the few herbs/spices to have been integrated into cuisine simply because it tastes good (i.e., because of its highly-pleasant aromatic flavour profile). There are also a number of important non-culinary uses for basil, based on its highly fragrant aroma, not to mention its antimicrobial properties, including in a ritualistic setting in countries such as Greece and Bulgaria.</p>
spellingShingle Spence, C
Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb
title Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb
title_full Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb
title_fullStr Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb
title_full_unstemmed Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb
title_short Sweet basil: an increasingly popular culinary herb
title_sort sweet basil an increasingly popular culinary herb
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