Fennel yields both a herb and a spice. All plant parts are edible: roots, stalks and leaves, with the spice coming from the dried seeds. A native to the Mediterranean, Fennel is an ancient and common plant known to the ancient Greeks and spread throughout Europe by Imperial Rome. It is also grown in India, the Orient, Australia, South America and has become naturalized in the US. It has been called the “meeting’ seed” by the Puritans who would chew it during their long church services. The name derives from the Latin foeniculum, meaning “little hay”
Spice Description
Fennel seeds split into two, one sometimes remaining on the stalk. They are 4 -8 mm (1/8 - 5/16 in) long, thin and curved, with colour varying from brown to light green (the green being superior).
Bouquet: warm, sweet and aromatic
Flavour: similar to a mild anise
Preparation and Storage
Seeds can be used whole or ground in a spice mill or mortar and pestle. Store away from light in airtight containers.
Plant Description and Cultivation
Fennel is a hardy perennial related to parsley, often cultivated as an annual, reaching heights of 1.5 - 2.5 m (5 - 8 ft). It resembles dill, which it can cross-pollinate with. It should be kept at a distance from dill because the resulting seed will have a dulled flavour. The flower heads are collected before the seeds ripen and threshed out when completely dried.
Diffrent Names in Diffrent Languages
French: fenouil
German: fenchel
Greek: marathon
Italian: finocchio
Spanish: hinojo
Chinese: wooi heung
Indian: barisaunf, madhurika, sonf
Indonesian: adas
Malaysian: jintan manis
Quality Cargoes & Committed Shipments
Quality Control
We strongly believe in quality committed cargoes. To maintain our quality we only supply north-east premium quality cargoes, which are beautiful in color and size. Beside all of it, we make our cargoes well cleaned and well dried with guaranteed maximum 12% mositure level.
Honouring Commitments
Committed shipments and timely deliveries are the most important factors in volatile Cloves business. To maintain our shipment schedule we are extremely against speculation. We prefer selling whatever is available in our warehouse ready to deliver. Forward shipments are also committed while keeping the ready cargo in our warehouses. |
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