Common Name: | Mountain Mint |
Other Names: | Oregano, Origano, Wild Marjoram, Winter Marjoram, Wintersweet |
Botanical Name: | Origanum vulgare |
Genus: | Origanum |
Family: | Lamiaceae |
Cultivation: | Well-drained to dry, neutral to alkaline soil in sun. Origanum dictamnus needs sharp drainage and protection from wet winters. Orgianum majorana, O. x majoricum, and O. onites may be slightly hardier in a sheltered, sharply drained situation. |
Propagation: | By seed sown in autumn or at 10-13°C (50-55°F) in spring (species only); by basal cuttings in late spring; by division in spring. |
Harvest: | Plants are collected as flowering begins, and leaves during the growing season, and sued fresh, distilled for oil, or dried for infusions. |
Native Location: | Europe |
Height: | 30-90cm (12-36in) |
Width: | 30-90cm (12-36in) |
Variations: | Acorn Bank Has distinctly pointed leaves, 2.5cm (1in) long, with inward curling margins, and white flowers (creamy pink in bud) with pink stamens. Height: 50cm (20in) Width: 50cm (20in) | Var. album Is small and bushy with light green leaves and white flowers. Height: 25cm (10in) Width: 25cm (10in) | Aureum Golden marjorum Has small, bright yellow-green leaves and lavender-pink flowers. Height: 75cm (30in) Width: 30cm (12in) | Aureum Crispum Has rounded, wrinkled, yellow-green leaves, to 1cm (½in) long that are at their best in spring. Scorches in full sun and is less vigorous and more tender than ‘Aureum’. Height: 30cm (12in) Width: 45cm (18in) | Compactum Compact Marjoram Is dwarf and mound-forming, with rounded, dark green leaves, to 2cm (¾in) long, and numerous, pink-violet flowers. Height: 15cm (6in) Width: 30cm (12in) | Country Cream Has white-variegated leaves and pink flowers. Height: 30cm (12in) Width: 30cm (12in) | Gold Tip syn. Variegatum Has yellow-tipped leaves, brightest in spring. Height: 40cm (16in) Width: 45cm (18in) | Subsp. gracile syn. O.tyttanthum Russian/Turkestan/Kyrgyz Oregano Has a slender habit, non-hairy stems, and smooth, gland-dotted leaves that have an excellent, mild flavor. Native Location: C Asia | Subsp. Hirtum syn. O. heracleoticum (oregano, winter marjoram) Is compact, with pungently scented, hairy, pointed leaves, hairy green, somtimes purple-tinged bracts, and white flowers from late spring to winter. Native Location: E Mediterranean Height: 30-70cm (12-28in) Width: 20-45cm (8-18in) | Subsp. hirtum ‘Greek’ Has bright green leaves and white flowers; excellent culinary herb, often dried as oregano. Height: 45-60cm (18-24in) | Nanum Is smaller all around than ‘Compactum’. Height: 20cm (8in) Width: 25cm (10in) | Polyphant Is a white-variegated, white-flowered cultivar, found as a sport of ‘Aureum Crispum’ at the Polyphant Herb Nursery, Cornwall, UK in the 1980s. Scorches in full sun. Height: 30cm (12in) Width: 30cm (12in) | Thumble’s Variety Is strong-growing, with mild-flavored, rounded , yellow-green leaves and white flowers. Height: 30cm (12in) Width: 30cm (12in) | Subsp. viride Usually has yellow-green bracts and white flowers. | White Anniversary Has bright green, white-margined leaves. Height: 20cm (8in) Width: 15-20cm (6-8in) |
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Hardiness: | Z5-9 |
History: | Most prized as a spice—especially in Greek, Italian, and Mexican cuisines—oregano, also called wild marjoram, has been a culinary herb for less than 200 years. Before that it was used almost exclusively as a healing herbs. The ancient Greeks named it “joy of the mountain”, for the Greek word oros (“mountain”) and ganos (“joy”) because it grew wild in that country’s mountains. Both the Greeks and Romans used oregano internally for convulsions, poisoning, and dropsy, and applied it externally, in poultices, to treat burns, insect bites, muscle pains, and sores. The early Anglo-Saxons used oregano for coughs and headaches, and by the Middle Ages, oregano tea was a popular remedy for chest congestion, melancholy, and the plague. Oregano was also much associated with myth and magic. The dried herb was strewn in homes, on doorsteps, and around graves to ward off demons and witches. (And it was sprinkled on clothes and bedding to repel insects.) For the Greeks and Romans, the herb symbolized love, and it was worn in bridal wreaths and made into love potions. It was a favorite herb of Juno, the queen of the Roman gods and goddesses, who protected married and pregnant women, and she was often shown wearing a wreath of dittany, a wild oregano that grew on Crete. |
Parts Used: | Whole Plant, Leaves, Oil |
Properties: | A pungently aromatic, antiseptic, warming herb that relaxes spasms, increases perspiration, benefits the digestion, stimulates the uterus, and acts as a mild expectorant. |
Medicinal Uses: | Internally for colds, influenza, minor feverish illnesses, indigestion, gas, stomach upsets, and painful menstruation. Contraindicated during pregnancy. Externally for bronchitis, asthma, arthritis, and muscular pain. Oil used in aromatherapy for similar conditions and, externally, to kill lice; it may cause skin irritation. To treat respiratory disorders, painful menstruation, rheumatoid arthritis, urinary tract disorders and cough. Oregano has antiflatulence, andtiseptic, antispasmodic, calming, expectorant, stomach-soothing, sweat-promoting, and tonic properties. IT is taken internally for anxiety, colic, coughs, headaches, indigestion, menstrual cramps, and menstrual irregularities, nausea, stress and tension, upper respiratory ailments, and upset stomach. Oregano is applied externally for joint and muscle pain and stiffness. |
Preparation: | Oregano is available as fresh and dried herb and in teas and tinctures. To make a tea, pour 1 cup of boiling water over 2 teaspoons of dried herb and steep for 10 minutes. Strain, and drink up to 2 cups a day. |
Typical Dose: | A typical dose of oregano is approximately 1 heaping tsp of dried herb mixed with 250 ml boiling water, steeped for 10 minutes, strained and taken as a tea. |
Possible Side Effects: | Oregano’s side effects include nausea, vomiting, and allergic reations. |
Drug Interactions: | Taking oregano with these drugs may interfere with the absorption of the drug: | Ferrous Sulfate, (Feratab, Fer-Iron) | Iron-Dextran Complex, (Dexferrum, INFeD) |
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Disease Effects: | May trigger reactions in those allergic to Basil, Lavender, and other members of the Lamiaceae family. |
Culinary Uses: | An important herb in Italian, Greek, and Mexican cooking, often used dried rather than fresh, in strongly flavored dishes in which ingredients such as chili, garlic, tomatoes, onions, olives, and wine predominate. Leaves and flowering tops are infused for tea. |
Economic Uses: | Oil is used in commercial food flavoring, toiletries, and men’s perfumes. Leaves and flowers are added to potpourris. |
Bibliography: | Encyclopedia of Herbs by Deni Brown. Copyright © 1995, 2001 Dorling Kindersley Limited. pp 295-297 The Essential Herb-Drug-Vitamin Interaction Guide by Geo. T. Grossberg,MD and Barry Fox,PhD Copyright©2007 Barry Fox,PhD. Pg.358 The Modern Herbal Primer by Nancy Burke Copyright©2000 Yankee Publishing, Inc. pp. 85-86 |