|
|
Fenugreek (Trigonella
foenum-graecum LINN.) Click on graphic
for larger image |
Fenugreek
Botanical: Foenum-graecum (LINN.) Family: N.O. Leguminosae
---Synonyms---Bird's Foot. Greek Hay-seed.
---Part Used---Seeds. ---Habitat---Indigenous to the
countries on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean. Cultivated in India,
Africa, Egypt, Morocco, and occasionally in England.
---Description---The name comes from
Foenum-graecum, meaning Greek Hay, the plant being used to scent
inferior hay. The name of the genus, Trigonella, is derived from
the old Greek name, denoting 'three-angled,' from the form of its corolla.
The seeds of Fenugreek have been used medicinally all through the ages and
were held in high repute among the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans for
medicinal and culinary purposes.
Fenugreek is an erect annual herb, growing about 2 feet high, similar
in habit to Lucerne. The seeds are brownish, about 1/8 inch long, oblong,
rhomboidal, with a deep furrow dividing them into two unequal lobes. They
are contained, ten to twenty together, in long, narrow, sickle-like pods.
Taste, bitter and peculiar, not unlike lovage or celery. Odour,
similar.
---Constituents---About 28 per cent mucilage; 5
per cent of a stronger-smelling, bitter fixed oil, which can be extracted
by ether; 22 per cent proteids; a volatile oil; two alkaloids,
Trigonelline and Choline, and a yellow colouring substance. The chemical
composition resembles that of cod-liver oil, as it is rich in phosphates,
lecithin and nucleoalbumin, containing also considerable quantities of
iron in an organic form, which can be readily absorbed. Reutter has noted
the presence of trimethylamine, neurin and betain; like the alkaloids in
cod-liver oil, these substances stimulate the appetite by their action on
the nervous system, or produce a diuretic or ureo-poietic effect.
[Top]
---Medicinal Action and Uses---In Cairo it is
used under the name of Helba. This is an Egyptian preparation, made
by soaking the seeds in water till they swell into a thick paste. Said to
be equal to quinine in preventing fevers; is comforting to the stomach and
has been utilized for diabetes. The seeds are soaked in water, then
allowed to sprout, and when grown about 2 or 3 inches high, the green
eaten raw with the seeds.
The seeds yield the whole of their odour and taste to alcohol and are
employed in the preparation of emollient cataplasms, ointments and
plasters.
They give a strong mucilage, which is emollient and a decoction of 1
OZ. seeds to 1 pint water is used internally in inflamed conditions of the
stomach and intestines. Externally it is used as a poultice for abscesses,
boils, carbuncles, etc. It can be employed as a substitute for cod-liver
oil in scrofula, rickets, anaemia, debility following infectious diseases.
For neurasthenia, gout and diabetes it can be combined with insulin. It
possesses the advantage of being cheap and readily taken by children, if
its bitter taste is disguised: 1 or 2 teaspoonful of the powder is taken
daily in jam, etc.
The ground seeds are used also to give a maple-flavouring to
confectionery and nearly all cattle like the flavour of Fenugreek in their
forage. The powder is also employed as a spice in curry. At the present
day, the ground seeds are utilized to an enormous extent in the
manufactures of condition powders for horses and cattle; Funugreek is the
principal ingredient in most of the quack nostrums which find so much
favour among grooms and horsekeepers. It has a powerful odour of coumarin
and is largely used for flavouring cattle foods and to make damaged hay
palatable.
In India the fresh plant is employed as an esculent.
---Other Species--- Trigonella
purpurascens, a British species,with small pinky-white flowers, one to
three together, and straight, six- to eight-seeded pods, twice as long as
the calyx.
Purchase
this Herb from Viablehealth.com
|