South Indian small-leaf
The traditional Kerala/Tamil Nadu Murraya koenigii cultivar — small dark leaflets, highly aromatic, pungent notes of citrus peel and roasted nut. The form used in daily tadka tempering from Kochi to Chennai.
herbaceous · citrus · bitter-citrus-peel
2500 y
of Tamil kitchen use
kari patta in South India
15+
carbazole alkaloids
mahanine, koenimbine, murrayanine
45 d
leaf flush cycle
from pruning to harvest
6 m
tree to productive bush
Murraya koenigii, evergreen
Curry leaf is the pinnate foliage of Murraya koenigii, a slender understory tree of the Rutaceae family native to the foothills of the Himalayas, the Deccan plateau and the wet zones of Sri Lanka. The leaves come in odd-pinnate sprays of eleven to twenty-one lance-shaped leaflets, each one roughly four centimetres long, matte on top and paler beneath. It is crucial to separate this plant from the unrelated Mediterranean «curry plant» Helichrysum italicum and from commercial curry powder blends — botanically, culinarily and aromatically, they share nothing. The leaf's aroma is driven by carbazole alkaloids, principally mahanimbine, mahanine and koenigicine, alongside alpha-pinene, sabinene, beta-caryophyllene and small amounts of linalool. Those carbazoles are unique in the kitchen and give the leaf its warm, almost-nutty tobacco-asafoetida edge. The canonical technique is the tadka or tempering: a ladle of hot ghee or coconut oil, black mustard seeds that pop within seconds, a pinch of urad dal, a few dried chillies, then a fistful of curry leaves thrown in whole — they shiver, blister and release their scent over sambar, rasam, dosa chutney, upma, poriyal and lemon rice. In Sri Lankan kari patta cookery the leaves stay in the finished dish.
Tasting notes
herbaceous · citrus · bitter-citrus-peel
Sharp green citrus lift on first sniff, then a warm nutty tobacco-like depth from carbazoles, a resinous pine edge from pinene, and a faint sulfurous hum reminiscent of asafoetida; in hot fat the leaf turns suddenly buttery and toasted-curry-powder-like.
Flavor compass
South India (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka) and Sri Lanka, India.
The traditional Kerala/Tamil Nadu Murraya koenigii cultivar — small dark leaflets, highly aromatic, pungent notes of citrus peel and roasted nut. The form used in daily tadka tempering from Kochi to Chennai.
The broader, lighter-green cultivar grown on Sri Lankan home plots and called karapincha. Milder, more herbaceous profile with a lemon-pepper finish, used generously in kottu roti and curry powder bases.
Local Thai cultivation in the northeast (Isan), called bai karee and used mostly in southern Thai curries like gaeng tai pla. Thinner leaflets, brighter citrus lift, slightly less bitter than the Indian types.
Growers cut back the Murraya koenigii bush hard; new aromatic flush follows within weeks in the Kerala and Tamil Nadu backyards.
Fresh pinnate leaves unfurl bright green, rich in carbazole alkaloids and essential oil — the cook's prize.
Small white fragrant flowers appear in panicles; the plant still throws harvestable leaves below.
Rains push explosive foliage. Leaves are picked daily for sambar, rasam, tadka across Tamil and Malayali homes.
Black fruits ripen. Seeds are sometimes used for propagation, never in cooking — only the leaves carry the aroma.
Fresh leaves lose aroma in 3 days refrigerated. Freezing on the stem preserves pinene and sabinene far better than air-drying.
The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.
GC-MS of Murraya koenigii leaf oil: sabinene, α-pinene and β-caryophyllene dominate the volatile fraction, while non-volatile carbazole alkaloids like mahanine define the identity.
2.6%
Essential oil
of fresh leaf
62%
Monoterpenes
of the volatile oil
15+
Carbazole alkaloids
mahanine, koenimbine, koenigine
73%
Moisture
of fresh leaf
Peppery-piney, the first hit off a hot pan.
Resinous pine — the green backbone.
Warm woody-clove — the savoury depth.
Citrus-mint lift — what makes rasam sing.
Non-volatile; bitter-tonic, studied for bioactivity.
Clean citrus — the freshness under the pine.
| Pepper | Mahanine | Oil |
|---|---|---|
★ Tamil Nadu (Coimbatore) Kongu belt · classic benchmark | 90% | 2.6% |
Kerala (Wayanad) Monsoon-lush · higher sabinene | 88% | 2.9% |
Sri Lankan kari patta Used in kottu & fish ambul thiyal | 85% | 2.3% |
Makrut lime leaf Citronellal-led · different profile | 55% | 1.0% |
Dried curry leaf (commercial) Air-dried · most volatiles lost | 40% | 0.6% |
Tamil Nadu, Nilgiris district (Coonoor) · est. 2008
“A hill-station herb grower in the Nilgiris that air-freights whole curry-leaf sprigs and cold-chain dried leaf to Middle Eastern hotels, UK retail and the growing French Tamil diaspora.”
MethodsShaded plantation in tea-estate interplant at 1 700-1 900 m, hand-harvested sprigs graded within four hours of picking, cold-store pre-cool at 2 °C, air-freight in vacuum bags for fresh line. The dry line uses vacuum-assisted 38 °C air to retain chlorophyll and volatile citrus notes; residues tested per batch at an NABL lab.
How the world cooks with it.
3 signature dishes
From Chettinad to Chennai tiffin counters, kari patta is the first leaf to hit hot ghee — the sound is the cue that dinner's starting.
Toor dal and tamarind stew finished with a mustard-curry-leaf tadka.
Thin tomato-tamarind broth tempered with ghee, mustard, curry leaf, pepper.
Black pepper, fennel and curry leaf carry the dark masala.
What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.
ورق الكاري
waraq al-kari
咖喱叶
gali ye
Curry leaf
Feuille de caloupilé
Curryblatt
कढ़ी पत्ता
kadhi patta
Foglia di curry
カレーリーフ
karee riifu
Folha de caril
Hoja de curry
Protein
Plant
No. Curry powder is a British-era spice blend (turmeric, coriander, cumin, fenugreek, chilli). Curry leaf is a single botanical — Murraya koenigii — with its own carbazole-alkaloid identity. One is a mix, the other is a leaf.