Safrole is a
phenylpropene. It is a colorless or slightly yellow oily liquid typically extracted from the root-bark or the fruit of
sassafras plants in the form of sassafras oil (although commercially available culinary sassafras oil is usually devoid of safrole due to a rule passed by the FDA in 1960), or is synthesized from
catechol or other related
methylenedioxy compounds. It is the principal component of brown
camphor oil, and is found in small amounts in a wide variety of plants, where it functions as a natural
pesticide. Ocotea cymbarum oil made from
Ocotea pretiosa, a plant growing in
Brazil, and sassafras oil made from
Sassafras albidum, a tree growing in eastern
North America, are the main natural sources for safrole. It has a characteristic "sweet-shop" aroma.