An essential aromatic herb in cooking, chopped mint will enhance your salads, sorbets, or even flavor the famous mojito cocktail. Practical and easy to use, chopped mint is a must-have in your spice cabinet.
Our recipe ideas for using chopped mint in your cooking:
The highly aromatic nose of Terre Exotique chopped mint takes us on a journey! Its intense, sweet and fresh aromas are both gentle and refreshing.
Mint belongs to the Lamiaceae family, its botanical name is Mentha Spicata. Harvested from May to October, the plant can reach up to 80 cm in height and grows in Europe, Asia, North America and North Africa. The world's leading producer of mint is Morocco.
Often confused, these two types of mint are quite different. Green mint is not a hybrid species, it belongs to Mentha spicata, unlike peppermint, whose botanical name is Mentha x piperita and is a hybrid. In addition, the taste of these two mints is opposite. One is sweet and sugary, the other is more peppery and stronger.
Mint, used as early as the 1st century BC, was found by archaeologists in dried mint leaves in the tombs of the Egyptians.
Mint also appears in Greek mythology where Hades, the God of darkness, was in love with the nymph Minthé. His wife, Persephone, jealous, transformed her into a mint plant.
Some peoples like the Assyrians or the Babylonians used mint to digest more easily. In Greece, mint was forbidden to soldiers because it was considered an aphrodisiac. Finally, the Hebrews used mint to make an oil to moisturize their bodies.
Price/kg | 0 |
---|---|
Allergen | Absence |
Native country | Egypte |
Genus and botanical species | Mentha spicata |
Ingredients | chopped mint |
Contenance | 50g |
TRACES EVENTUELLES D'ALLERGÈNES | céleri, sésame, moutarde, fruits à coques. |