A plant that has fine foliage and celery-like stalks and a large base The plant has a light, anise like flavor
- Leaves, stems, roots, seeds, and oil are all parts of the fennel plant used in various ways Leaves have a sweetish flavor, particularly good in sauces for fish; also useful with pork or veal, in soups and in salads Seeds have a sharper taste Use fennel sparingly in sauerkraut, spaghetti sauce, chili, hearty soups, and as condiment on baked goods
An aromatic plant from the carrot family Florence fennel, also called "finocchio," is eaten raw and in salads Common fennel is the plant that produces fennel seeds Italian (or Sicilian) fennel features stalks that can be eaten raw
is a pale-green, feathery-toped vegetable It has celery-like stems and a swollen, bulb-like base of overlapping broad layers It is used in recipes from hors d'oeuvres through dessert
Fennel is a plant with a crisp rounded base and feathery leaves. It can be eaten as a vegetable or the leaves can be used as a herb. a pale green plant whose seeds are used to give a special taste to food and which is also used as a vegetable. Perennial or biennial aromatic herb (Foeniculum vulgare) of the parsley family, native to southern Europe and Asia Minor and widely cultivated. The greenish brown to yellowish brown oblong oval seeds smell and taste similar to anise. The seeds and extracted oil are used for scenting soaps and perfumes and for flavouring candies, liqueurs, medicines, and foods, particularly pastries, sweet pickles, and fish. The thickened base of Florence fennel (F. vulgare dulce) is eaten as a vegetable
leaves used for seasoning aromatic bulbous stem base eaten cooked or raw in salads any of several aromatic herbs having edible seeds and leaves and stems
Any of various Mediterranean and western Asian annual herbs of the genus Nigella, having finely dissected leaves, showy white, blue, or yellow solitary flowers, and an aggregate fruit composed of several follicles. Also called nigella
fennel
Heceleme
fen·nel
Türkçe nasıl söylenir
fenıl
Telaffuz
/ˈfenəl/ /ˈfɛnəl/
Etimoloji
[ 'fe-n&l ] (noun.) before 12th century. From Middle English fenel Old English fenol Latin fēnuculum fēnum (“hay”).