Artemisia princeps, also commonly called yomogi,[2][3][4]Japanese mugwort,[3][5][6][4]Korean wormwood,[7]Korean mugwort[8] or wormwood[9] in English, is an
Asian plant species in the
sunflower family, native to
China,
Japan and
Korea.[4][10] It is a
perennial, very vigorous plant that grows to 1.2 meters. This species spreads rapidly by means of underground
stolons and can become invasive. It bears small, buff-colored flowers from July to November which are
hermaphroditic, and pollinated by wind.[11] The leaves are feather shaped, scalloped and light green, with white dense fuzz on the underside.
Distribution and habitat
Artemisia princeps is native to
China,
Japan and
Korea.[12][4] It has been introduced into
Belgium and the
Netherlands.[12] It grows in a variety of habitats including roadsides, slopes, valleys, and riverbanks.[13]
Uses
Culinary
Leaves and young seedlings can be eaten raw or cooked.[14] They can also be used in salads and soups after removal of the bitterness.[how?]
Japan
In Japan the herb is used to flavor
glutinous ricedumplings called kusa mochi (草餅) or yomogi mochi (蓬餅),[15] or rice flour dumplings called kusa
dango (草団子).[16][6] The young leaves can be lightly boiled before being pounded and added to impart a pleasant colour, aroma and flavour.[16] Because of this use, the Artemesia plant is also called mochigusa (餅草, though it is also called mogusa in reference to its use in
moxibustion).[17][18] The plant is also actively grown in the state of Hawaii, and used for making the herbal mochi by residents of Japanese descent.[19]
The leaves are occasionally blanched and added to soups or rice in Japanese cuisine.[20][21]
Korea
Mugwort, referred to as ssuk (쑥) in Korean,[7] is widely used in
Korean cuisine as well as in
traditional medicine (hanyak). In spring, which is the harvesting season, the young leaves of mugwort are used to prepare savory dishes such as jeon (Korean-style pancakes), ssuk kimchi, (쑥김치), ssukguk (쑥국, soup made with ssuk). Most commonly, however, fresh mugwort as well as dried leaves ground into powder are a characteristic ingredient in various types of tteok (rice cakes).[22] Today, ssuk also adds flavor and color to more contemporary desserts and beverages, e.g. ice cream, breads, cakes, mugwort tea (ssukcha 쑥차) and ssuk latte (쑥라떼).
In China it is known as huanghua ai (黄花艾, literally yellow-flower mugwort).[24]
Culture
In Korea, it is called ssuk (쑥) or tarae ssuk (타래쑥)[24] which is deeply related to
Dangun Sinhwa (단군신화), legend of
Gojoseon, the first Korean kingdom. To the ancient people in Korea, ssuk was one of the foods that was believed to have medicinal or religious value.[25] In the foundation myth of Gojoseon in 2333 BCE, eating nothing but 20 cloves of
garlic and a bundle of ssuk for 100 days let a
bear be transformed into a woman.[25]
^Chung, Hye Kyung; Bae, Eun Kyong; Ji, Hee Jung; Hwang, Jung Suk; Park, Dong Woon; Kim, Jung Eun; Jung, Hwa Jin; Choi, Hyun Ju; Lee, Dong Seok (2003). "An oligosaccharide fraction from Korean mugwort herb suppresses death of the mouse thymocytes in culture by down-regulating the Fas death receptor gene". Biotechnology Letters. 25 (18): 1549–1553.
doi:
10.1023/A:1025482516404.
ISSN0141-5492.
PMID14571981.
S2CID34154735.
^Takahashi, Masumi; Natsuko Hosokawa; Keiko Mori.
"Yomogi (Mugwort)". Japan Through Young Eyes.
Archived from the original on 15 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-18.