Provenance Technique Library

Corsica — endemic maquis species; wild-harvested island-wide from sea level to 1200m altitude. Techniques

1 technique from Corsica — endemic maquis species; wild-harvested island-wide from sea level to 1200m altitude. cuisine

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Corsica — endemic maquis species; wild-harvested island-wide from sea level to 1200m altitude.
Nepita — Corsican Calamint: The Island's Defining Herb
Corsica — endemic maquis species; wild-harvested island-wide from sea level to 1200m altitude.
Nepita — Calamintha nepeta subsp. nepeta — is the single most distinctive herb in the Corsican culinary vocabulary. It grows wild across the island's maquis scrubland from sea level to 1200m, its small grey-green leaves releasing an aroma that is neither mint nor oregano but something between the two: a cool eucalyptol note from the menthol-family compounds, overlaid with a slightly more resinous, peppery character absent from European mint (Mentha spp.). Nepita is used fresh or dried in virtually every Corsican preparation — rubbed into charcuterie before curing, placed inside cabri rôti before the spit, scattered over aziminu, stirred into brocciu omelettes, and bundled with rosemary in minestra. It is not a seasoning that is added to dishes — it is the baseline aromatic character of Corsican cooking, the herb that a cook on the island reaches for automatically in the way a French cook reaches for thyme. No mainland substitute fully replicates it: mentuccia (Italian lesser calamint) is the closest, but the Corsican variety has more pronounced eucalyptol and a stronger flavour density.
Corsica — Maquis & Terroir