During its first year, it grows only leaves, but during its second year, its fluted stem can reach a height of 2.5 meters (just over 8 feet), and the root is used in flavoring preparations. Its leaves consist of numerous small leaflets divided into three principal groups, each of which is again subdivided into three lesser groups. The edges of the leaflets are finely toothed or serrated. The flowers, which blossom in July, are small and numerous, yellowish or greenish, are grouped into large, globular umbels that bear pale yellow, oblong fruits.
Angelica grows only in damp soil, preferably near rivers or deposits of water.
Angelica archangelica grows wild in
Russia,
Finland,
Sweden,
Norway,
Denmark,
Greenland, the
Faroe Islands, and
Iceland, mostly in the northern parts of the countries. It is cultivated in
France, mainly in the
Marais Poitevin, a marsh region close to
Niort in the department
Deux-Sèvres. Commercially available angelica is often sourced from
Hungary,
Romania,
Bulgaria,
Germany and
Poland. ==Use and history==