Latin Name:Pimpinella anisum
Ingredient:100% Anise Seed Extract
Test Method:TLC
Anise Seed has been used medicinally in Asia since time immemorial.
It is used as an expectorant and to boost the immune system. Anise
Seed is most commonly used as a digestive aid.
Official Latin Name: Pimpinella anisum
Anise is native to the Middle East and has been used as a medicine,
and as a flavor for medicine, for many centuries. In China, Anise
Seed is known as Huei-hsiang. Ancient Romans hung Anise plants near
their pillows to prevent bad dreams. They also used Anise to aid
digestion and ward off epileptic attacks. Colonists in the New
World used it as a medicinal crop as well. The Anise seed is used
as an expectorant, to assist digestion, fight infections and
enhance milk production. It is also helpful for menopausal
symptoms. Europeans use Anise in cakes, cookies, and sweet breads.
Mustaceum is an after dinner digestive cake flavored with Anise. It
is often the herb used to flavor licorice candy. In the Middle East
and India, it is used in soups and stews. Its licorice-like flavor
is popular in candies and Anise oil is used in liqueurs. A popular
domestic spice, Anise seed is used for dry irritable coughs. The
tea is also used for infant catarrh, flatulence, colic and griping
pains. Fresh leaf can be used in salads. Improves the taste of
other medicines, breads, cakes, cookies, fruit, tomato sauce, and
pickles. Anise is added to cattle feed as it increases milk
production. Stuff seeds in a sachet or add to sleep pillows to
prevent nightmares. In India, Anise water is used as cologne. It is
used to flavor unpleasant medicines. Anise is also used in
toothpastes, mouthwashes and soaps. Anise Seed is a gray-brown oval
seed from Pimpinella anisum, a plant in the parsley family. It is
related to Caraway, Dill, Cumin, and Fennel. The genus name
Pimpinella is thought to be derived from the Latin "bipinnula", or
bipinnate, as the leaves are arranged symmetrically on both sides.
It was first cultivated in ancient Egypt and later by the Greeks.
The Shakers grew Anise as an important cash crop. Chemical
constituents include essential oil (anethole, estragol, methyl
chavicol), furano- coumarins, flavonoid glycosides, fatty acids,
phytoestrogens, starch, protein, choline, mucilage. Take Anise Seed
after a meal to aid digestion.