Basil, Mrihani (Ocimum basilicum) seeds, organic

(3 customer reviews)

$2.95

Family:  Mint (Lamiaceae)

Annual, with leaf harvest in 60 days

This is a traditional cultivar originally grown in Zanzibar, introduced by Richo Cech to the US in 1990.  The leaves are green spotted with purple, ruffled, with a strong, unique basil smell and flavor.  The flowers are also purple.  In E African cuisine, the fresh or dried leaves are used as an ingredient in curries, stir fries, and the omipresent coconut-based sauces.  The dried leaves are also an ingredient in handmade perfumes (manukato), often worn in a small cloth bag around the neck.  The scent is pervasive and pleasant.

One of the attributes of this basil is the large leaves that persist with good color, turgidity and succulence even as the plant goes into seed.  At the base of the flowering/seeding racemes, the purple-spotted, frilly leaves will hang down from the lower stem, easy to pull off in bunches.  Excellent for late-season pesto or for adding to tomato sauce. This has become a tradition at our home–always to rave reviews.

After some time scientists in the US got ahold of this basil and isolated a gene that can be used to confer downy mildew resistance to other culinary basils. They did this without my knowledge and I’m neither here nor there about it.  The seed available here is grown by me, is organic, is true to form, is unique, and is relinquished to the public domain.  Plant prefers full sun and regular garden soil.  Plants are mid to large size and may be spaced at 2 feet apart.  Standard basil culture.

packet contains 30 seeds
~800 seeds per g
~4,000 seeds per 5g
~8,000 seeds per 10g
Certified Organically Grown

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5 out of 5 stars

3 reviews

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What others are saying

  1. JoAnn

    Beautiful Basil

    JoAnn (verified owner)

    One of my new favorite basil varieties. Strong, pleasant aroma and beautiful flowers and leaves. This basil tastes very nice as well. Different, and little like anise.

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    • Richo Cech

      Richo Cech

      Hi JoAnn, Thanks for this honest appraisal of Mrihani. We noticed something else this year–in the latter part of the season, after all the other basils had flown to seed and lost their leaf appeal, the mrihani was the only kind still good enough to harvest for pesto. The large leaves hang down on the stem, making it really easy to harvest. richo

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  2. Bob

    Strong grower with a strong scent

    Bob

    I’ve enjoyed growing this basil and will be brewing with it as a flavoring

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  3. One person found this helpful
    Janja Kadunc

    Janja Kadunc

    This is amazing basil with nice anise like smell.
    Seeds are bigger than of others basils and because they swell well, they can be used as substitute for chia seeds in many receipts.

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