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Roses

Appears in
The Scented Kitchen: Cooking with Flowers

By Frances Bissell

Published 2012

  • About

‘The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem, For that sweet odour which doth in it live.’

William Shakespeare, Sonnet LIV

Roses have been used in the kitchen at least since Roman times, when their petals were used to flavour wine. Later, Arab pharmacists used roses to make syrups, cordials and tonics, while the great Persian physician Avicenna is said to have made the first rosewater in the tenth century, and the use of flower waters spread throughout those parts of southern Europe conquered by the Arabs, particularly the Iberian peninsula.

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