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Description

Are you finding yourself thirsty for a little soda pop this summer? How about for some botanical knowledge about soda pop’s history?

In this plant face-off episode, Erin and Sean put some fizz into the competition with the plants behind two iconic flavours: the cola nut that gives cola its kick, and the sassafras that puts the root in root beer. Or, at least, the plants that did serve those roles before the advent of artificial flavouring. 

Erin takes the first swig with a dramatic overview of the North American Sassafras albidum, an aromatic tree with a long history of use for medicine, food, furniture, and one nautical beverage that almost saw it hunted to extinction. She peers into the muddy waters surrounding its first use in root beer and, later, its controversial ban by the FDA, speculates about Choctaw influence on its use in gumbo, and delights over the Kanien’kéha (Mohawk) name, wenhákeras, meaning “smelly thing.”  Sean takes his kick at the can with the cola nut, the key ingredient behind the flavour and caffeine of cola beverages. He discusses the flavourful Malvaceae family tree of the West African cola tree (also spelled kola) (Cola nitida and Cola acuminata) and its surprising identity as a broad-leaf evergreen before serving up some knowledge about the fruit’s growing habits and its cultural history as a stimulant and a beverage ingredient. After some medical meanderings and a look at modern-day distribution, we wrap up Coca-Cola origins and its present-day ingredients.

Who had the most interesting facts to share today? Vote for your favourite by tagging us on social media and using the hashtag #PAWFaceOff. 

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Credits

Website Design and Illustration by Sophia Alladin

Intro and Outro Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/soundroll/when-my-ukulele-plays

License code: GWOIMMBAS15FG6PH

Citations

Common names for sassafras

Wood and charcoal indentification in southern MD. (n.d.). https://apps.jefpat.maryland.gov/woodandcharcoalid/Webpages-trees/Sassafras.htm

Indigenous names for sassafras

Plenty Canada. (2024). SaSSaFras. Greenbelt Indigenous Botanical Survey. https://gibsurvey.ca/species/sassafras

Furniture uses

Packard Forest Products. (2011, October 30). Sassafras - Packard Forest products. https://packardforestproducts.com/lumber/hardwood-lumber/species-guide/sassafras/

Food and medicine uses

MacKinnon, A., & Kershaw, L. (2016). Edible and medicinal plants of Canada. Publishing Partners.

Root beer’s origins and the banning of safrole oil

Verberg, S. (2023, November 30). Root beer: the quintessential American soda. American Homebrewers Association. https://homebrewersassociation.org/beyond-beer/root-beer-the-quintessential-american-soda/

Sassafras oil and toxicity

https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/pharmacology-toxicology-and-pharmaceutical-science/sassafras

The history of sassafras in North America

Sassafras: Native gem of North America. (2022, October 10). Cornell Botanic Gardens. https://cornellbotanicgardens.org/sassafras-native-gem-of-north-america

Sassafras in Ontario

Sassafras. (n.d.). ontario.ca. https://www.ontario.ca/page/sassafras

Growing sassafras

Sassafras albidum (Cinnamon Wood, Common Sassafras, Mitten Tree, Sassafras, White Sassafras) | North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox. (n.d.). https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/sassafras-albidum/

Hassani, N. (2025, May 7). How to grow and care for sassafras. The Spruce. https://www.thespruce.com/sassafras-tree-plant-profile-5199214

Cola nut overview

Kola Trees (Genus Cola). (n.d.). iNaturalist. https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/132989-Cola

Wikipedia contributors. (2025, July 18). Kola nut. Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kola_nut

Cola nut etymology

Kola - Etymology, Origin & Meaning. (n.d.). Etymonline. https://www.etymonline.com/word/kola

Medicinal uses for cola nut and caffeine

Cola nut: health benefits, side effects, uses, dose & precautions. (2021, June 11). RxList. https://www.rxlist.com/supplements/cola_nut.htm#:~:text=Cola%20nut%20is%20used%20for,used%20as%20a%20flavoring%20ingredient

Timestamps

00:11 Introduction

01:13 What's Growing On? Sean's Fruit Shrubs and Willow Wall

03:38 What's Growing On? Reciprocity in Erin's Vegetable Garden

06:03 The Range of Serviceberry Taste

06:51 Water Break: Regionalisms

07:19 The Plant Face-Off

08:25 Sassafras Albidum, an Aromatic Shrub

09:08 The Etymology of Sassafras 

11:10 Indigenous Names for Sassafras

12:55 The Distinct Look of a Sassafras Tree

15:47 Wildlife, Building and Dye Use of Sassafras

16:16 Sassafras' Medicinal Properties

20:00 Eating Sassafras leaves, stems, and pith

21:49 How Sassafras Gave Us Root Beer...And What Went Wrong

25:27 The Great Sassafras Hunts for Saloop

27:33 The Invention of Root Beer

28:50 Making Fermented vs. Carbonated Root Beer

30:24 Growing Sassafras for Beauty, Hedges, Specimen Trees, and Remediation

36:05 Water Break: Love Your Library

37:28 Cola Nut? Kola Nut? Pick Your Spelling.

39:54 West African Names for Cola Nut

40:58 The Etymology of Cola Nut

42:56 The Cola Tree, Both Evergreen and Deciduous

43:55 Cola's Unusual Flowering and Fruiting Habit

45:45 Cola Range and Cultivation

46:44 The Cola Nut: A Fleshy Pod

47:57 Culinary and Medicinal Uses of Cola

51:00 Cultural and Hospitality Uses in West Africa

52:29 Cola Nut Harvesting

53:20 The Invention of Coca Cola

54:40 1880 Ad for Coca Cola, an "Intellectual Beverage"

56:11 Conclusion and Contact Us