Pimento
Related Category: Plants
or
allspice, common names for a tree (
Pimenta dioica or
P. officinalis) of the family Myrtaceae (
myrtle family) cultivated in the West Indies for its dried unripe berries, used medicinally and as a spice (also called pimento or allspice). The spice supposedly combines the flavors of several other spices, hence the name; it is used chiefly in pickles and relishes. The leaves and berries yield an essential oil used for flavoring, e.g., in Benedictine and other liqueurs. In America the names
pimento and
allspice are also applied to plants of other families:
pimento to the large, sweet Spanish pepper (Span.
pimento) of the nightshade family, and
allspice to several aromatic shrubs, e.g., the Carolina allspice (
Calycanthus floridus), a cultivated ornamental, and the wild allspice, or spicebush (
Lindera benzoin), of the family Lauraceae (laurel family). Pimento is classified in the division
Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Myrtales, family Myrtaceae.