A Guide to Culinary Basils
Source of Recipe
Grandpoohbah
Ocimum basilicum includes a number of different basils most commonly used for
cooking.
Sweet basil
Your basic basil, with large leaves and white flowers. The Genovese variety (names
include Sweet Genovese and Genovese or Genova Profumitissima) is particularly
nice, with a very pleasing flavor preferred for pestos. I've also found it a vigorous,
luxuriant grower, slow to bolt.
Lettuce leaf (O. b. crispum)
A short, wide plant with thick, very crinkled leaves; slow to bolt. Other varieties
include Mammoth and Napoletano; Green Ruffles is similar. The flavor is sweet, and
not as strong as the other sweet basils, making it especially good for tossing into
salads. The leaves can also be used to wrap fish, chicken or a rice stuffing for grilling.
Dwarf or bush basils (O. b. minimum)
These shorter varieties (Spicy Globe, Piccolo Verde, Fino Verde or Fine Green)
bear small, narrow leaves with a sweeter, less pungent smell than the large-leaf types.
It sounds like a great nuisance to pick all those tiny leaves off, but actually the stems
are quite soft and succulent, so that you can chop up the sprigs, stems and all. The
delicate flavor tends to wash out in long cooking, so add the leaves at the end or use
them raw.
Opal basils
These O. basilicum hybrids include Dark Opal (a 1962 All-America Selections
winner) and Purple Ruffles (also an AAS winner in 1987). The purple varieties can
be quite beautiful, but they are far less vigorous growers and there has been a
noticeable falloff in the purpleness of both the above varieties since their introduction,
with more and more green or piebald plants. Breeders at W. Atlee Burpee have
recently begun a reselection process to produce seed stock for more purely purple
plants. Rubin, released in 1993, is a reselection of Dark Opal for a more consistent
dark coloration.
Exotic Basils
Some of these are Ocimum basilicum, some are other basil species, and some no
one really knows for sure. One name can cover many quite different varieties. Some
are available as seed; others only as plants.
Lemon basil (O. b. americanum or O. b. citriodorum)
Generally has small, light green leaves and a distinctive lemony aroma. O. b. 'Mrs.
Burns' is a more vigorous selection with larger leaves and a powerful lemon scent.
Try it in pesto, salad dressings, sauces, fish dishes and desserts.
Licorice (or anise) basil and cinnamon basil
Handsome, tallish varieties of Ocimum basilicum with dark foliage and flowers and
distinctive spicy flavors. Cinnamon basil makes a good jelly.
Thai, East Indian, Puerto Rican and Cuban basils
are among those gathered from other parts of the world, and often expressly suited
to creating the flavors of their local cuisines.
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