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Fennel
Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare) is a plant of the Apiaceae or parsley family, which produces edible seeds and leaves. The cultivar Florence fennel has inflated leaf bases which form a sort of bulb. It comes mainly from India and Egypt and it has an anise-like flavor, but is more aromatic and sweeter.
Description
It is a perennial herb, erect, glaucous, and grows to 2 m tall. It is highly aromatic. The leaves grow up to 40 cm long; they are finely dissected, with the ultimate segments filiform; umbels are terminal, 5-15 cm wide; umbellets with 20-50 tiny flowers, these are on filiform pedicels. The fruit is from 4-9 mm long, half as wide or less, and grooved.
The cultivar Florence fennel is much smaller than the wild type and has inflated leaf bases which are eaten as a vegetable.
Habitat/ecology
Fennel is native to southern Europe (especially by the Mediterranean) and southwestern Asia. In Hawaii, it is cultivated and naturalized along roadsides, in pastures, and other open sites. It has been similarly widely introduced to the US and southern Canada. In Fiji, it is occasionally cultivated near sea level, and sparingly naturalized in shady waste places. It is propagated by seed.
Cooking
It is used traditionally as a herb in cooking, particularly with fish. It is also used as a diuretic and to improve milk supply of breastfeeding mothers. Florence fennel, popular in Italy and Germany, among other countries, may be eaten as a salad (e.g. with chicory and avocado), blanched and marinated, or cooked (e.g. as risotto).
Many Indian restaurants will have a dish of fennel seed with small candies mixed therein near the entrance. Some patrons of these establishments will eat a spoonful on their way out as a digestive and to cleanse the palate.
Fennel is also used in some natural toothpastes.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fennel".
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