Sweet Woodruff

Galium odoratum

"Galium odoratum", the sweet woodruff or sweetscented bedstraw, is a flowering perennial plant in the family Rubiaceae, native to much of Europe from Spain and Ireland to Russia, as well as Western Siberia, Turkey, Iran, the Caucasus, China and Japan.
Sweetscented Bedstraw - Galium odoratum This mat-forming plant produces whorls of 6 to 8 fragrant leaves, which smell like freshly mowed hay. It is listed as being absent from Connecticut, but is not since I found it in Connecticut.

The sweet scent of this plant is derived from coumarin. This smell increases with wilting and the dried plant is used in potpourri, as a moth deterrent, and as a flavoring in beverages.

Habitat: Mixed forest
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/94686/sweetscented_bedstraw_-_galium_odoratum.html
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/94685/sweetscented_bedstraw_-_galium_odoratum.html Galium,Galium odoratum,Geotagged,Spring,Sweetscented Bedstraw,United States,bedstraw

Appearance

The leaves are simple, lanceolate, glabrous, 2–5 cm long, and borne in whorls of 6–9. The small flowers are produced in cymes, each white with four petals joined together at the base. The fruits are 2–4 mm diameter, produced singly, and each is covered in tiny hooked bristles which help disperse them by sticking temporarily to clothing and animal fur.

This plant prefers partial to full shade in moist, rich soils. In dry summers it needs frequent watering. Propagation is by crown division, separation of the rooted stems, or digging up of the barely submerged perimeter stolons. It is ideal as a groundcover or border accent in woody, acidic gardens where other shade plants fail to thrive. Deer and chickens avoid eating it.
Sweetscented Bedstraw - Galium odoratum Kasteelpark Arenberg. KU Leuven Botanical garden.  Belgium,Galium odoratum,Geotagged,Spring,Sweetscented Bedstraw

Uses

As the epithet "odoratum" suggests, the plant is strongly scented, the sweet scent being derived from coumarin. This scent increases on wilting and then persists on drying, and the dried plant is used in potpourri and as a moth deterrent. It was, and partially is, used to flavour May wine, sweet juice punch, syrup for beer, brandy, jelly, jam, a soft drink, ice cream, and herbal tea. Also very popular are sweet woodruff flavoured jellies, with and without alcohol. In Germany, it was and to some extent still is also used to flavour sherbet powder, which features prominently in Günter Grass' novel "The Tin Drum".

However, industrial usage of the plant for sweets was prohibited in Germany in 1974, due to coumarin, the flavorant found in woodruff, being toxic to rats and mice in studies. It has however not been found to be harmful to humans, even in large doses, in which it follows a different metabolic pathway. The flavour is still popular for sweets in Germany, but is achieved artificially with 6-methyl coumarin. Products targeted towards adults, such as alcoholic drinks, are still permitted to include coumarin, in limited quantities.

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderGentianales
FamilyRubiaceae
GenusGalium
SpeciesG. odoratum