Foeniculum Vulgare · Fennel Seed Powder · Saunf · Perunjeerakam · 100% Organic
The Spice That Feeds Babies, Calms Stomachs, and Eases Periods — All From One Seed
Fennel is the rare spice that works equally well in your kitchen and your medicine cabinet. In Indian households, fennel (saunf) is chewed after meals to freshen breath and aid digestion — but that daily ritual barely scratches the surface of what this seed can do. Fennel powder is one of the most important galactagogues in Ayurveda (it increases breast milk production in nursing mothers), a powerful antispasmodic that relieves menstrual cramps with clinical evidence showing up to 80% pain reduction, and a gentle digestive that’s safe enough for infants. The active compound anethole gives fennel its distinctive sweet-anise flavour and most of its medicinal properties. Pure, finely ground organic fennel seed powder from India. Use it as a spice in cooking, stir it into warm water as a digestive, or take it as a supplement. 100g pack.
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One Spice, Eight Reasons to Use It Daily
Fennel’s active compound anethole — the same molecule responsible for its sweet, anise-like flavour — is behind most of its medicinal properties. But fennel also contains fenchone, estragole, essential oils, flavonoids, and polyphenols that contribute anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial effects. Here’s what the research and thousands of years of traditional use tell us.
Breast Milk Production (Galactagogue)
Fennel is one of Ayurveda’s most trusted galactagogues — substances that increase breast milk supply. The active compounds anethole, estragole, and fenchone stimulate prolactin production, the hormone directly responsible for milk secretion. Studies have shown significant increases in blood prolactin levels after fennel consumption. Fennel doesn’t just increase the quantity of breast milk — it also improves flow and quality. Breastfeeding mothers across India have used fennel water (saunf ka pani) for centuries as a daily supplement. It’s also one of the safest galactagogues available, gentle enough that fennel water is even given to colicky infants.
Menstrual Pain Relief (Dysmenorrhea)
Recent clinical research has shown that fennel can reduce menstrual cramp pain by approximately 80% — comparable to some pharmaceutical painkillers. Anethole acts as an antispasmodic, relaxing the smooth muscle contractions in the uterus that cause cramping. Beyond pain, fennel also addresses the secondary symptoms of dysmenorrhea: nausea, vomiting, weakness, and dizziness. For women who prefer natural alternatives to NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen), fennel powder taken during menstruation is one of the best-evidenced herbal options available.
Digestive Health — Bloating, Gas & Indigestion
This is the most universally known benefit of fennel — and the reason billions of people chew fennel seeds after meals. Fennel is a carminative: it prevents and relieves gas formation in the digestive tract. It relaxes the smooth muscles of the intestinal wall (antispasmodic), reduces bloating, eases stomach cramps, and promotes healthy bowel movement. Fennel water is one of the oldest remedies for infant colic — gentle enough for newborns, effective enough for adults with chronic digestive discomfort. The powder form is more concentrated and versatile than whole seeds.
Blood Sugar Management
Fennel’s essential oils, particularly anethole, have been studied for anti-diabetic properties. The antioxidant compounds protect pancreatic beta cells (the cells that produce insulin) from oxidative damage — a key mechanism in Type 2 diabetes progression. Fennel also helps reduce high blood glucose levels and may prevent hyperglycaemia-related complications. While fennel is not a diabetes treatment on its own, incorporating it into the diet as a regular spice provides cumulative blood sugar support alongside dietary management.
Oral Health — Antibacterial Action
Anethole has demonstrated antibacterial activity against Streptococcus mutans — the primary bacteria responsible for tooth decay and dental cavities. Fennel’s essential oils inhibit the growth of these oral bacteria, making it a natural support for dental hygiene. This is why chewing fennel seeds after meals is a tradition across South Asia — it freshens breath, cleanses the mouth, and actively fights the bacteria that cause cavities. The powder can be used in homemade tooth powders or simply swished with water as an oral rinse.
Immune Support
Fennel’s high concentration of polyphenols and antioxidants gives it immunomodulatory properties — it helps regulate and strengthen the immune system rather than simply “boosting” it. The antioxidants neutralise free radicals that can damage immune cells, while fennel’s compounds support the production of red blood cells and improve overall blood health. Regular dietary use provides a steady, gentle immune-supporting effect — not a dramatic intervention, but a consistent foundation.
Four Ways to Use Fennel Powder
In Cooking — As a Culinary Spice
Fennel powder is a staple in Indian, Middle Eastern, and Mediterranean cuisines. Add it to curries, dals, vegetable stir-fries, soups, and rice dishes for a sweet, warm, anise-like depth. It’s a key component in many Indian spice blends including panch phoron (Bengali five-spice) and some versions of garam masala. Sprinkle on roasted vegetables, incorporate into bread doughs, or add to marinades for fish and chicken. Start with ½ teaspoon per dish and adjust to taste. The beauty of culinary use is that you get health benefits passively — every meal becomes medicine.
Fennel Water — Digestive & Breastfeeding Aid
Stir ½ to 1 teaspoon of fennel powder into a cup of warm water. Let it steep for 5 minutes, stir again, and drink. This is “saunf ka pani” — the simplest and most traditional preparation. Drink after meals for digestion, between meals for breast milk production, or at the first sign of bloating or gas. For breastfeeding mothers, drinking fennel water 2–3 times daily is the standard recommendation in Ayurveda. The taste is mild, sweet, and pleasant — most people enjoy it without any sweetener. Can also be mixed into Moolihai’s Masala Chai or Pure Mint Herbal Tea for a blended digestive drink.
Direct — As a Supplement
Take ½ to 1 teaspoon of fennel powder directly with water, 2–3 times daily. This is the most concentrated method — ideal for targeted benefits like menstrual pain relief (start 2–3 days before expected period and continue through the first 2–3 days), blood sugar support, or intensive breastfeeding support. The powder form is more potent than whole seeds because grinding releases more of the essential oils and active compounds. Can be mixed with honey (try Moolihai’s Ginger Infused Honey for combined digestive benefits) to improve palatability.
For Infants — Fennel Gripe Water
For colicky babies (over 6 months), dissolve a small pinch of fennel powder (⅛ teaspoon) in 2–3 tablespoons of warm water. Let cool to lukewarm, strain through a fine cloth if needed, and give to the baby with a spoon or dropper. This is the traditional Indian gripe water — far gentler and more natural than commercial gripe waters that contain artificial ingredients. Fennel’s carminative action relieves gas and colic in infants. Always consult your paediatrician before giving any herbal preparation to an infant under 12 months.
What Our Customers Say
“The flavor, texture, and color of Moolihai’s fennel powder are excellent. The packaging is also well done.”
“It has the aroma of freshy.”
“Ready to use – a great product from Moolihai.”
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What You’re Getting
100g / 250g / 450g
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Seed Powder
Finely ground fennel seeds
India
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Common Questions
Yes — fennel is one of the most traditional and well-studied galactagogues (milk-boosting substances) in Ayurveda and across multiple traditional medicine systems worldwide. It’s been used by breastfeeding mothers in India for centuries. The active compounds anethole, estragole, and fenchone stimulate prolactin, the hormone that drives milk production. Clinical studies have confirmed significant increases in prolactin levels with fennel consumption. The standard recommendation is ½ to 1 teaspoon of powder in warm water, 2–3 times daily. Fennel is gentle enough that its flavour even passes into the breast milk, which may help calm colicky babies. That said, always inform your healthcare provider when adding any new supplement during breastfeeding.
Clinical research has shown fennel can reduce dysmenorrhea (menstrual pain) by approximately 80% — which is comparable to some over-the-counter painkillers. The mechanism is antispasmodic: anethole relaxes the smooth muscle contractions in the uterus that cause cramping. For best results, start taking fennel powder (1 teaspoon in warm water, 2–3 times daily) about 2–3 days before your expected period and continue through the first 2–3 days of menstruation. It also helps with associated symptoms like nausea, weakness, and dizziness. It won’t work as a rescue remedy taken once during severe cramps — the key is consistent use before and during the period. Many women combine fennel with Moolihai’s Ginger Infused Honey for enhanced anti-inflammatory and anti-nausea effects.
Grinding fennel seeds breaks open the seed coat and releases significantly more of the essential oils (anethole, fenchone, estragole) than chewing whole seeds ever can. This makes the powder more potent per teaspoon for medicinal use. Powder is also far more versatile — it dissolves in water for fennel tea, blends into spice mixes, can be taken directly as a supplement, and incorporates smoothly into cooking. Whole seeds are great for chewing after meals (the traditional mouth freshener use), but for therapeutic purposes — breastfeeding support, menstrual pain, blood sugar management — the powder form delivers higher and more consistent concentrations of active compounds.
Fennel water is one of the oldest and most widely used remedies for infant colic in India and across the Middle East. For babies over 6 months, a small pinch of fennel powder (⅛ teaspoon) dissolved in 2–3 tablespoons of warm water, cooled to lukewarm, and strained is generally considered safe. Give with a spoon or dropper. The carminative (anti-gas) action gently relieves the gas buildup that causes colic pain. For babies under 6 months, consult your paediatrician before giving any supplement — exclusive breastfeeding is recommended during this period. If you’re breastfeeding, drinking fennel water yourself may help — the fennel compounds pass through breast milk and can calm the baby’s digestion indirectly.
Both are excellent digestives, but they work slightly differently and have different additional benefits. Fennel is primarily an antispasmodic and carminative — it relaxes the gut, prevents gas, and has the additional benefits of boosting breast milk and relieving menstrual pain. It has a sweet, anise-like flavour. Cumin (jeera) is more of a digestive stimulant — it increases enzyme production and speeds up digestion. It has a warm, earthy flavour. In Ayurveda, they’re often used together: cumin to stimulate digestion, fennel to calm and de-bloat afterwards. Many Indian families keep both — cumin in the cooking, fennel after the meal.
The 100g pack ($9.99) is perfect for culinary use — it lasts 2–3 months when used as a cooking spice (½ teaspoon per dish). If you’re using fennel powder therapeutically (breastfeeding, menstrual relief, daily digestive), you’ll go through 100g in about 3–4 weeks at 1–2 teaspoons per day. The 450g pack is the best value for regular medicinal users, breastfeeding mothers, or households that use fennel in both cooking and health routines. Fennel powder retains potency for months when stored in a cool, dry place in an airtight container — buy the larger size without worrying about freshness.
*Disclaimer: This is a food-grade spice with traditional medicinal uses. Health benefits described are based on traditional Ayurvedic knowledge and published scientific research on Foeniculum vulgare. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The galactagogue and dysmenorrhea-relieving properties are supported by clinical studies but individual results vary. Consult your healthcare provider before use during pregnancy (fennel has mild estrogenic properties). Fennel is generally safe for breastfeeding mothers but always inform your doctor of any supplements you take. For infant use, consult a paediatrician.



Abilasha (verified owner) –
The quality is good.
Aamani (verified owner) –
It’s a good product; I liked it.
Lalitha (verified owner) –
“It has the aroma of freshy.”
Anasuya (verified owner) –
The size of the Moolihai pack is great.
Aadhya (verified owner) –
It’s a product of good quality
Arpana (verified owner) –
It’s an excellent product.
Akshara (verified owner) –
Ready to use – a great product from Moolihai.
Alaka (verified owner) –
The flavor, texture, and color of Moolihai’s fennel powder are excellent. The packaging is also well done
Aadarshini (verified owner) –
Top-notch product in the Moolihai