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As the customs may bar a live plant from entering the country, I
would need to find it within. First, what’s the Chinese name for the
common sage?
Google translated sage as 鼠尾草. Baidu added 可做调料. So far, so good.
Then Wikipedia showed the herb’s scientific name as Salvia officinalis.
Baidu 百科, however, said 鼠尾草’s latin name was Salvia japonica, which
from the web looks quite different from the common sage which came from
the Mediterranean. Wikipedia says S. japonica is native to East and South Asia.
基维百科 gave the correct latin name for 鼠尾草,but that seemed it.
Not a single line was written in Chinese about the herb and not a
single link was provided there. So besides its name and maybe Scarborough
Fair, the Chinese knew nothing about the plant?
It is interesting that Baidu 百科 says 鼠尾草(S. japonica) is from the Mediterranean or "原产于地中海地区", while Wikipedia says S. japonica is "native to several provinces in China and Taiwan." :-)))
REFERENCE:
- https://baike.baidu.com/item/鼠尾草/1187863
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvia_japonica
I cook once a week the Italian dish 'sausage and beans' which calls for sage.
I began to grow it with a starter in 2020. More details can be found in this post https://blog.wenxuecity.com/myblog/64243/202006/42548.html.
I'd like to be able to enjoy the dish when I visit somewhere, e.g., China, and wondered how to get the herb there, which led to this post. Maybe unbeknownst to me, it's already growing in there. Or I just have to bring dried leaves with me.
Sage is so often seen in the wilderness that we can tell black sage from white. I would very much to know how you grow at home and how you use for cooking. We both love the fragrance, bold and refreshing.