Lemon verbena is cultivated, harvested, and dried in the local
Velay district of
Haute-Loire, partly under the direction of the distillery and partly by the
Carmelite nunnery at Vals-près-Le-Puy. It is planted each year in May, growing to about a metre high and harvested before the first frost in September. In addition to lemon verbena, the process uses
juniper berries,
mace, and some thirty other herbs and spices. Certain of these botanicals are soaked in a diluted alcohol solution for several weeks, resulting in a liquid with a deep green colour and strong bouquet. The rest are heated in special
bain-marie copper stills with
brandy, water, and plain alcohol, capturing the
aromatics and producing a rich
distillate. Honey from the
Auvergne, sugar, and
cognac are then added, creating the different blends: • Green (the best known, with
55% alcohol), • Gold (a softer blend, 40%), • Extra (with added cognac and matured for two years, 40%) • La Petite (weaker, 18%). Five- and ten-year-old variants complete the range. The product is then aged for a year or more in oak barrels and bottled at the Pagès-Vedrenne site in
Nuits-Saint-Georges. About 150,000 bottles are produced annually. Other than France, it is also popular in the
Benelux,
Scandinavia, the Far East, and the USA. Verveine du Velay is also used as an ingredient in soufflés, ice creams, macaroons and cakes, as well as to add flavour to certain beers. The Pagès distillery is recognised by the French State as an (
Living Heritage Company), having excellence in traditional skills. == Other verbena-based liqueurs ==