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Name -
Saffron
Genus Species
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Crocus sativus
Family - Iridaceae
Origin - Near East, possibly Asian Minor
Cultivated -
Spain, Austria, Italy, Greece, France, Iran,
Kashmir (India)
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Description
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The purple crocus, Crocus
sativus, has long been cultivated in Asia Minor and in Spain so that
its hand-picked stigmas can be used both as a spice and as a
brilliant red-yellow dye. The plant is now cultivated in India, Iran
and several Mediterranean countries; it used to be grown in the
southern England town, Saffron Walden. The yellow color of paella,
bouillabaise, saffron cakes, challah bread, and some curry sauces is
characteristically obtained from saffron. Unlike the cheaper
turmeric, it can penetrate into rice grains, and a small amount can
impart its flavor and smell to the food. Currently, saffron is one
of the most expensive spices because it requires labor-intensive
harvesting. The medicinal uses of saffron in the past included its
general employment as an antidote against poisoning, a digestant, an
aphrodisiac, a tonic, and as a specific for dysentery and measles.
In accordance with the Doctrine of Signatures, its yellow color
signified its natural ability to treat jaundice. See a list of
spices by Taste and Hotness.
Useful Parts - The
flower’s triple stigma, and the adjacent part of the style yield the
spice.
Medicinal Properties -
Currently some herbalists claim it has anti-cancer and other
remarkable properties, but there is no evidence to support such
beliefs.
See chemicals in spices.
Historical View -
Saffron was formerly in great repute as a stimulant, antispasmodic,
and emmenagogue; but at present it is scarcely ever employed in this
country, or in the United States, as a medicinal agent, except that
it is sometimes given to young children in exanthematous diseases
from its reputed power of promoting the eruption.
Bentley, Robert and Henry Trimen. Medicinal Plants; being
descriptions with original figures of the principal plants employed
in medicine and an account of the characters, properties, and uses
of their parts and products of medicinal value. London, Churchill,
1880. (WZ 295 B556m 1880)
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