Rosemary’s culinary uses are well established. It is used to flavor meats, stews, teas, stuffing and many other gourmet feats ranging from savory to sweet. Rosemary can be used in breads, and also flavoring oils and butters. Sprigs of rosemary can be used as a graceful accent in presenting food such as a charcuterie board or in crafts like wreath making.
Rosemary is an easy herb to grow in patio pots, vegetable gardens and as landscape shrubs. Some cultivars can be grown as erect columns, rounded or irregular shrubs, and makes a fragrant topiary. It can also be used as ground cover, draping over a wall and in rock gardens. Outdoor pots can be brought indoors before first frost and kept as a fragrant house plant. Landscapers place rosemary in mountain gardens as it is resistant to damage by both deer and fire. The flowers are valued by butterflies and bees. Perfumes, hair care products, lotions, candles, potpourris, and sachets have long used rosemary oil. It takes over 100 pounds of raw rosemary to distill one pound of oil.
Students in Roman times wore sprigs of rosemary thought to assist with memory; brides and grooms wore rosemary to encourage remembrance of wedding vows. Romans and Greeks considered rosemary a sacred plant that symbolizing both love and death. They threw sprigs into graves to signify their desire to remember the departed. In the West, rosemary has been associated for centuries with faithfulness and friendship as in Ophelia’s much quoted line in Hamlet:
“There’s rosemary; that’s for remembrance. Pray, Love, Remember”