Chemistry:Sage oil

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Short description: Steam distillation of Salvia officinalis
Sage oil in glass vial
Sage oil

Sage oils are essential oils that come in several varieties:

Dalmatian sage oil

Also called English, Garden, and True sage oil. Made by steam distillation of Salvia officinalis partially dried leaves. Yields range from 0.5 to 1.0%. A colorless to yellow liquid with a warm camphoraceous, thujone-like odor and sharp and bitter taste. The main components of the oil are thujone (50%), camphor, pinene, and cineol.[1]


Clary sage oil

Sometimes called muscatel. Made by steam or water distillation of Salvia sclarea flowering tops and foliage. Yields range from 0.7 to 1.5%. A pale yellow to yellow liquid with a herbaceous odor and a winelike bouquet. Produced in large quantities in France, Russia and Morocco. The oil contains linalyl acetate, linalool and other terpene alcohols (sclareol), as well as their acetates.[2]

Spanish sage oil

Made by steam distillation of Salvia lavandulifolia leaves and twigs. A colorless to pale yellow liquid with the characteristic camphoraceous odor. Unlike Dalmatian sage oil, Spanish sage oil contains no or only traces of thujone; camphor and eucalyptol are the major components.

Greek sage oil

Made by steam distillation of Salvia triloba leaves. Grows in Greece and Turkey. Yields range from 0.25% to 4%. The oil contains camphor, thujone, and pinene, the dominant component being eucalyptol.[3]

Judaean sage oil

Made by steam distillation of Salvia judaica leaves. The oil contains mainly cubebene and ledol.[4]

References

  1. Karl-Georg Fahlbusch (2007), "Flavors and Fragrances", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, p. 113, doi:10.1002/14356007.a11_141 
  2. George A. Burdock (2010), Fenaroli's Handbook of Flavor Ingredients (6th ed.), Taylor & Francis, pp. 327–328, ISBN 978-1-4200-9077-2 
  3. Ivana Cvetkovikj (2015), "Essential oil composition of Salvia fruticosa Mill. populations from Balkan Peninsula", Macedonian Pharmaceutical Bulletin 61 (1), http://bulletin.mfd.org.mk/volumes/Volume%2061_1/61_1_004.pdf 
  4. Andrea Böszörményi (2009), "Chemical and Genetic Relationships among Sage (Salvia officinalis L.) Cultivars and Judean Sage (Salvia judaica Boiss.)", Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 57 (11), doi:10.1021/jf9005092