Italian Herbs

Basilico, rosmarino, salvia, origano — the aromatic herbs that define Italian regional cooking.

Basilico Genovese DOP

Must-See
LiguriaWhere/Type
The pesto herbKey fact

Small-leaved, intensely aromatic, DOP-protected Ligurian basil. The only acceptable basil for true pesto alla genovese. Grown in Prà, west of Genoa.

Rosmarino

Must-See
All ItalyWhere/Type
The roast herbKey fact

Rosemary grows wild across Italy — the scent IS the Mediterranean. Used with roast meats, focaccia, potatoes. Rosemary-infused olive oil is a staple.

Salvia

Must-See
Central ItalyWhere/Type
The butter herbKey fact

Sage and butter (burro e salvia) is the simplest and most perfect pasta sauce. Also fried as a fritto (sage leaves in batter). Essential in saltimbocca.

Origano

Must-See
Southern ItalyWhere/Type
The pizza herbKey fact

Italian oregano is intensely aromatic — different from Mexican or Turkish varieties. Dried oregano on pizza and grilled fish is quintessentially southern Italian.

Prezzemolo

Must-See
All ItalyWhere/Type
The everywhere herbKey fact

Flat-leaf parsley appears in almost every savoury dish. The Italian expression "sei come il prezzemolo" (you're like parsley) means "you're everywhere."

💡 Pro tip: Grow Italian basil from seed if you can — supermarket basil plants are forced and weak. Or buy basil plants at an Italian market and keep them on a sunny windowsill.

Where to start

Visit Genoa's Prà district to see DOP basil growing in greenhouses. Then eat pesto made minutes after picking — the freshness difference is extraordinary.

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