Salvia sclarea, the clary or clary sage (clary deriving from Middle English clarie, from Anglo-Norman sclaree, from Late Latin or Medieval Latin meaning clear), is a Biennial plant (short-lived) herbaceous perennial in the genus Salvia. It is native to the northern Mediterranean Basin and to some areas in north Africa and Central Asia. The plant has long been cultivated as an herb and is currently grown for its essential oil.
Clary seeds have a Mucilage coat, which is why some centuries-old herbal guides recommend placing a seed into the eye of someone with a foreign object in it so that it could adhere to the object and make it easy to remove. This practice is noted by Nicholas Culpeper in his Complete Herbal (1653), who referred to the plant as "clear-eye".
It has also long been used as an additive to wine and beer. In 16th-century Germany elderflower-infused clary was added to to make a more potent beverage known as Muscatel.
In the United States, this oil is mostly produced on a large scale in and around Bertie County in northeastern North Carolina.
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