Home > Food and Beverage > Caribbean & West Indian



Culantro: A Much Utilized Little Understood Herb

Sort Desciption:

creasingly large West Indian Latin American and Asian immigrant communities in metropolises .... There are reportedly as many variations of the recipe as ...



Content Inside:

Culantro: A Much Utilized Little Understood HerbPage 1506Culantro: A Much Utilized Little Understood HerbChristopher RamcharanCulantro (Eryngium foetidum L. Apiaceae) is a biennial herb indigenous to continental Tropical Americaand the West Indies. Although widely used in dishes throughout the Caribbean Latin America and the FarEast culantro is relatively unknown in the United States and many other parts of the world and is often mistaken and misnamed for its close relative cilantro or coriander (Coriandrum sativum L.). Some of its commonnames descriptive of the plant include: spiny or serrated coriander shado beni and bhandhania (Trinidad andTobago) chadron benee (Dominica) coulante (Haiti) recao (Puerto Rico) and fit weed (Guyana).Culantro grows naturally in shaded moist heavy soils near cultivated areas. Under cultivation the plantthrives best under well irrigated shaded conditions. Like its close relative cilantro culantro tends to bolt andflower profusely under hot highlight long days of summer months. Recent research at UVIAES has demonstrated that it can be kept in a vegetative mode through summer when treated with GA3sprays.The plant is reportedly rich in calcium iron carotene and riboflavin and its harvested leaves are widelyused as a food flavoring and seasoning herb for meat and many other foods. Its medicinal value include itsuse as a tea for flu diabetes constipation and fevers. One of its most popular use is in chutneys as an appetitestimulant. The name fitweed is derived from its supposedly anticonvulsant property. The presence of increasingly large West Indian Latin American and Asian immigrant communities in metropolises of the USCanada and the UK. creates a large market for culantro and large quantities are exported from Puerto Ricoand Trinidad to these areas.Culantro is increasingly becoming a crop of international trade mainly to meet the demands of ethnicpopulations in the developed countries of the West. Large immigrant communities ...

Source: www.hort.purdue.edu


add to Google Reader add to Google Bookmark add to bloglines add to newsgator add to FURL add to digg add to webnews add to Netscape add to Yahoo MyWeb add to spurl.net add to diigo Bookmark newsvine Bookmark del.icio.us Bookmark @ SIMPIFY Bookmark MISTER WONG Bookmark Linkarena Bookmark icio.de Bookmark oneview Bookmark folkd.com Bookmark yigg.de Bookmark reddit Bookmark StumbleUpon Bookmark Slashdot Bookmark blinklist Bookmark technorati add to blogmarks add to blinkbits add to ma.gnolia add to smarking.com add to netvouz add to co.mments add to Connotea add to de.lirio.us
Search Terms:

 

Related Files

MOUNTAIN CHICKEN

Filed under: Food and Beverage and Caribbean & West Indian
is hunted in large numbers for its meaty legs which are used in traditional West Indian recipes and as. their name suggests they taste like more readily ...

Kitchen cultures

Filed under: Food and Beverage and Caribbean & West Indian
Traditional West Indian recipes include fungi docouna fritters kallaloo goat water and. cassava bread along with dessert favourites such as stewed ...

Follow the thing: West Indian hot pepper sauce.

Filed under: Food and Beverage and Caribbean & West Indian
pickles as early as 1740 and recipes for pepper wine and pepper vinegar ..... Fervent foods the company which sold the Pepup West Indian hot pepper ...

Blanchards Caribbean Cornbread

Filed under: Food and Beverage and Caribbean & West Indian
Blanchards Caribbean Cornbread. Heres a recipe that will change your opinion about cornbread forever. Moist and rich this has kernels of corn. ...

Culantro: A Much Utilized Little Understood Herb

Filed under: Food and Beverage and Caribbean & West Indian
creasingly large West Indian Latin American and Asian immigrant communities in metropolises .... There are reportedly as many variations of the recipe as ...