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Origanum vulgare

  • Perennial
Home Perennial Origanum vulgare

Dry grassy areas and scrub, usually on calcareous soils.

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[blocksy-content-block id=”832″]
Family: Lamiaceae
Height: 0.6 m / 2 ft
Sun, Semi-shade
Light, Medium and Heavy Soil
Dry to Moist

Plant Rating

Edible Uses: 4 of 5
Medicinal Uses: 3 of 5
Other Uses: 5 of 5

Native Habitat

Oregano, Pot Marjoram Origanum vulgare native habitat is Dry grassy areas and scrub, usually on calcareous soils.

Edible Uses

Leaves - raw or cooked as a potherb. Oregano is an important flavouring herb in Mediterranean cookery, and is often used dried rather than fresh. The leaves are used as a flavouring for salad dressings, vegetables and legumes, and are frequently included in strongly flavoured dishes with chillies, garlic, onions etc. A nutritional analysis is available. Flowers, usually appear in late spring, are edible. Much of the commercially available dried oregano does not come from this plant but from a number of different, often unrelated plants. These include Lippia graveolens, L. palmeri and Origanum syriacum. A herb tea is made from the dried leaves and flowering stems.

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