parsley
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- University of Florida - IFAS Extension - Parsley—Petroselinum crispum (Mill.) Nym.
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Petroselinum crispum has antioxidant properties, protects against DNA damage and inhibits proliferation and migration of cancer cells
- Royal Horticultural Society - How to grow Parsley
- Go Botany - Parsley
- University of Wisconsin-Madison - Wisconsin Horticulture - Parsley, Petroselinum crispum
- WebMD - Health Benefits of Parsley
- University of Arkansas - Division of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service - Petroselinum crispum
- PlantVillage - Parsley
- Drugs.com - Parsley
- University of Minnesota Extension - Growing parsley in home gardens
- Healthline - Parsley: An Impressive Herb With Health Benefits
parsley, (Petroselinum crispum), hardy biennial herb of the carrot family (also called parsley family; Apiaceae), native to Mediterranean lands. Parsley leaves were used by the ancient Greeks and Romans as a flavouring and garnish for foods. The leaves are used fresh or dried, their mildly aromatic flavour being popular with fish, meats, soups, sauces, and salads. Parsley is often the principal ingredient of bouquet garni and fines herbes.
Physical description
As a biennial plant, parsley grows vegetatively for its first season of growth, overwinters, and then flowers in the second season. The compound leaves—deep green, tender, and either flat or deeply frilled (curly)—develop in a cluster the first season; these are harvested for use. Many farmers do not leave parsley plants in the field after their productive leaf season. If left for the second season of growth, seed stalks rise about 1 metre (3.3 feet) tall and are topped by compound umbels of small greenish yellow flowers followed by tiny seedlike fruits, similar to those of a carrot but without spines. Parsley seedlings are small and weak; they emerge with difficulty from heavy crusty soils.
Parsley contains less than 0.5 percent essential oil, the principal component of which is a pungent, oily, green liquid called apiol.
Herbal medicine
In addition to its use as a culinary herb, parsley has a long history of use in traditional and herbal medicine. The plant has been used to alleviate menstrual pain and as an herbal abortifacient and may have anti-inflammatory properties. Ingestion of parsley seed oil or the consumption of large amounts of other parsley preparations can induce potentially lethal reactions such as organ damage, hemorrhages, or damage to peripheral nerves in people who take them.
Related plants
Hamburg parsley, or turnip-rooted parsley (Petroselinum crispum, variety tuberosum), is grown for its large white parsnip-like root, which is popular in Europe. The leaves of coriander, or cilantro (Coriandrum sativum), are similar in appearance to flat-leaf parsley; the plant is sometimes known as Chinese parsley.