يانسون
yansoun
80–95%
anethole share
of the essential oil
2–6%
essential oil yield
of dry seed weight
110 d
sowing to harvest
Mediterranean summer cycle
4000 y
of recorded use
from Pharaonic Egypt onward
Anise, also called aniseed or rarely anix, is a flowering plant in the family Apiaceae native to the eastern Mediterranean region and Southwest Asia.
Anise seed is the small, ribbed fruit of Pimpinella anisum, an annual umbellifer native to the eastern Mediterranean and cultivated since antiquity in Egypt, Anatolia, Greece and the Iberian peninsula. Despite sharing its signature liquorice note with star anise and fennel, it is botanically unrelated to both — the common thread is anethole, which makes up 80 to 95 per cent of its essential oil. The seed is a defining ingredient of the aniseed liqueur belt that runs from Portuguese aguardente and French pastis to Greek ouzo, Turkish raki, Lebanese arak and Italian sambuca. In bakeries it scents German Pfeffernüsse, Dutch muisjes, Scandinavian rye breads and Italian biscotti. Its sweetness sits lower and greener than star anise, with a herbaceous lift that star anise cannot deliver.
Mediterranean basin, Türkiye.
Türkiye
Mediterranean basin · Antakya, Hatay (Turkey)
Pimpinella anisum seeded in warm, well-drained soil after the last frost — Mediterranean and Anatolian gardens.
White umbels open. The plant reaches 50–60 cm. Bees work the flowers; anethole already perfumes the leaves.
Green schizocarps ripen on the umbel. Growers watch for the first grey-brown tone — the signal to cut.
Umbels are cut in the cool morning, tied in sheaves, dried under cover to preserve volatile anethole.
Once dry, the umbels are rolled by hand or by light machine, the paired mericarps fall out, chaff is winnowed.
Stored whole in sealed glass. Aroma holds 18 months; ground anise fades within weeks.
The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.
GC-MS of Pimpinella anisum: trans-anethole makes up 80–95% of the volatile oil. p-anisaldehyde and estragole trace the sweet-floral edge.
3.5%
Essential oil
of dry mericarp
88%
trans-Anethole
of the volatile oil
9.2%
Moisture
post shade-dry
40+
Volatile compounds
identified in recent studies
The signature: sweet liquorice, warm, rounded.
Minty-aniseed, sharper edge — monitored for intake limits.
Floral, almost hawthorn — lifts the top.
Woody-balsamic — a soft background.
Bright citrus — the lift that keeps anise from going cloying.
Pine-fresh green — a thin, clean thread.
| Pepper | Anethole | Oil |
|---|---|---|
★ Turkish (Çeşme/Hatay) Anatolia · balanced, classic | 88% | 3.5% |
Spanish (Alicante) Matalahúga · higher anethole | 92% | 4.0% |
Syrian Aleppo · rounder, rustic | 85% | 3.2% |
Chinese star anise Illicium verum · different species, more oil | 90% | 9.0% |
Fennel seed Foeniculum vulgare · fenchone shifts profile | 65% | 4.5% |
How the world cooks with it.
3 signature dishes
Marseille's pastis culture is anise culture — the 17h louche ritual leans on green anise plus star anise.
Macerated anise distillate diluted with iced water until it louches opalescent.
A pinch of anise seed in the broth sharpens the rouille and saffron.
Hard boat-shaped biscuits perfumed with orange blossom and anise.
What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.
يانسون
yansoun
মৌরি
mouri
大茴香
dà huíxiāng
Anijs
Anise seed
Anis vert
Anis
सौंफ (विलायती)
saunf vilayati
Adas manis
Anice
アニス
anisu
아니스
aniseu
Jintan manis
Anis
Анис
anis
Anís
சோம்பு
sombu
โป๊ยกั๊ก (ชนิดเมล็ด)
poi-kak
Anason
سونف
sonf
Hồi xanh
Protein
Plant
Sweet
Drink
No. Anise seed comes from Pimpinella anisum (a Mediterranean umbellifer), star anise from Illicium verum (a Chinese evergreen tree). They share one dominant molecule — trans-anethole — which is why they taste similar, but the full aromatic envelope differs: anise is softer, more floral, with p-anisaldehyde lift; star anise is warmer, more medicinal, and carries more oil.