Anise is an annual herb cultivated in many countries but native to Southern Europe and the Mediterranean. A member of the Apiaceae family, it is related to Caraway, Dill, Cumin, and Fennel. The dried fruits have been used for centuries for flavouring drinks, pastries, and candies. The ancients prized it as a medicinal plant.
Anise grows up to 60 cm high, is umbrella-shaped and has lacy leaves and delicate white flowers resembling Parsley. The fruits, often incorrectly termed “seeds”, are covered with short hairs, and each contains two gray-brown, oblong, approximately ½ cm seeds with light ribs.
Anise fruit contains about 1.5-4% volatile oil (quite a low proportion for a spice), which is about 80% antheole. Anise also contains coumarins.
One of aniseed’s main uses are for Anise-flavoured alcoholic drinks: Raki from Turkey, Ouzo from Greece and Pernod and Anisette from France. In Western cuisine, Anise is found mainly to candies (most commonly licorice), breads, cookies and cakes. In Middle Eastern and Indian cooking, the variety of Anise-flavoured foods is wider: soups and stews often feature Anise. The young leaves may be eaten raw or cooked, and can be a flavouring or a garnish.
The essential of the seed may flavour pickles, Aniseed balls, ice cream, chewing gum, and other foods. Oil of Star Anise may substitute for oil of Anise.
The oil is also used in perfumes, soaps, mouthwashes, toothpastes and other toiletries. Anise and its oil have been used to relieve flatulence and as a cough suppressant, sedative, and expectorant.
The plant is an ingredient of potpourri.