Herbal Simples - Plants That Heal

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Healing Vegetables

Healing Vegetables, Vegetable Cures

Asparagus

Asparagus

"Liebig, or some other scientist maintains that asparagin—the alkaloid in asparagus-develops form in the human brain: so, if you get hold of an artistic child, and give him plenty of asparagus, he will grow into a second Raffaelle!"

Posted Jun 12, 2010 937 Reads More ...

Cabbage

Cabbage

"The time has come," as the walrus said in Alice and the Looking
Glass
, "to talk of many things"—

"Of shoes, and ships, and sealing-wax; of Cabbages, and kings."

Posted Jun 17, 2010 324 Reads More ...

Capsicum

Capsicum

The Capsicum, or Bird Pepper, or Guinea Pepper, is a native of tropical countries; but it has been cultivated throughout Great Britain as a stove plant for so many years (since the time of Gerard, 1636) as to have become practically indigenous. Moreover, its fruit-pods are so highly useful, whether as a condiment, or as a medicine, no apology is needed for including it among serviceable Herbal Simples.

Posted Jun 17, 2010 294 Reads More ...

Carrot

Carrot

The yellow core of the Carrot is the part which is difficult of digestion with some persons, not the outer red layer.

Before the French Revolution the sale of Carrots and oranges was prohibited in the Dutch markets, because of the unpopular aristocratic colour of these commodities.

Posted Jun 17, 2010 259 Reads More ...

Celery

Celery

In 1879, Mr. Gibson Ward, then President of the Vegetarian Society, wrote some letters to the Times, which commanded much attention, about Celery as a food and a medicament.

"Celery," said he, "when cooked, is a very fine dish, both as a nutriment and as a purifier of the blood; I will not attempt to enumerate all the marvellous cures I have made with Celery, lest medical men should be worrying me en masse. Let me fearlessly say that rheumatism is impossible on this diet."

Posted Jun 17, 2010 293 Reads More ...

Garlic

Garlic

The Garlic (Allium sativum), Skorodon of the Greeks, which was first cultivated in English gardens in 1540, takes its name, from gar, a spear; and leac, a plant, either because of its sharp tapering leaves, or perhaps as "the war plant," by reason of its nutritive and stimulating qualities for those who do battle.

Posted Jul 20, 2010 253 Reads More ...

Lentil

Lentil

Among the leguminous plants which supply food for the invalid, and are endowed with certain qualifications for correcting the health, may be justly placed the Lentil, though we have to import it because our moist, cold climate is not favourable for its growth.

Posted Sep 9, 2010 431 Reads More ...

Leek

Leek

The Leek (Allium porrium) bears an Anglo-Saxon name corrupted from Porleac, and it is also called the Porret, having been the Prason of the Greeks. It was first made use of in England during 1562.

Posted Sep 9, 2010 395 Reads More ...

Lettuce

Lettuce

Our garden Lettuce is a cultivated variety of the wild, or strong-scented Lettuce (Lactuca virosa), which grows, with prickly leaves, on banks and waysides in chalky districts throughout England and Wales. It belongs to the Composite order of plants, and contains the medicinal properties of the plant more actively than does the Lettuce produced for the kitchen. An older form of the name is Lettouce, which is still retained in Scotland.

Posted Sep 9, 2010 328 Reads More ...

Onion

Onion

Seeming at first sight out of place among the lilies of the field, yet Garlic, the Leek, and the Onion are true members of that noble order, and may be correctly classified together with the favoured tribe, "Clothed more grandly than Solomon in all his glory."

Posted Sep 29, 2010 232 Reads More ...

Parsnip

Parsnip

This cultivated Parsnip has been produced as a vegetable since Roman times. The roots furnish a good deal of starch, and are very nutritious for warming and fattening, but when long in the ground they are called in some places "Madnip," and are said to cause insanity.

Posted Oct 28, 2010 311 Reads More ...

Pea

Pea

"Peas were brought from Holland, and were fit dainties for ladies, they came so far, and cost so dear."

Posted Oct 28, 2010 231 Reads More ...

Plantain

Plantain

The Plantains (Plantaginacecoe), from planta, the sole of the foot, are humble plants, well known as weeds in fields and by roadsides, having ribbed leaves and spikes of flowers conspicuous by their long stamens. As Herbal Simples, the Greater Plantain, the Ribwort Plantain, and the Water Plantain, are to be specially considered.

Posted Dec 1, 2010 210 Reads More ...

Potato

Potato

Our invaluable Potato, which enters so largely into the dietary of all classes, belongs to the Nightshade tribe of  dangerous plants, though termed "solanaceous" as a natural order because of the sedative properties which its several genera exercise to lull pain.

Posted Dec 1, 2010 177 Reads More ...

Radish

Radish

Radishes were celebrated by Dioscorides and Pliny as above all roots whatsoever, insomuch, that in the Delphic temple there was a Radish of solid gold, raphanus ex auro dicatus: and Moschinus wrote a whole volume in their praise; but Hippocrates condemned them as vitiosas, innatantes, acoegre concoctiles.

Posted Dec 1, 2010 161 Reads More ...

Rhubarb

Rhubarb

Our Garden Rhubarb is a true Dock, and belongs to the "many-kneed," buckwheat order of plants. Its brilliant colouring is due to varying states of its natural pigment (chlorophyll), in combination with oxygen. For culinary purposes the stalk, or petiole of the broad leaf, is used.

Posted Dec 1, 2010 233 Reads More ...

Schalot

Schalot

The Schalot, or Eschalotte, is another variety of the onion tribe, which was introduced into England by the Crusaders, who found it growing at Ascalon. And Chives (Allium schoenoprasum) are an ever green perennial herb of the onion tribe, having only a mild, alliaceous flavour. Epicures consider the Schalot to be the best seasoning for beef steaks, either by taking the actual bulb, or by rubbing the plates therewith.

Posted Dec 1, 2010 306 Reads More ...

Spinach

Spinach

Spinach (Lapathum hortense) is a Persian plant which has been cultivated in our gardens for about two hundred years; and considerably longer on the Continent. Some say the Spinach was originally brought from Spain. It was produced by monks in France at the middle of the 14th century.

Posted Dec 15, 2010 203 Reads More ...

Tomato

Tomato

Belonging to the Solanums the Tomato (Lycopersicum) is a plant of Mexican origin. Its brilliant fruit was first known as Mala oethiopica, or the Apples of the Moors, and bearing the Italian designation Pomi dei Mori. This name was presently corrupted in the French to Pommes d'amour; and thence in English to the epithet Love Apples

Posted Mar 4, 2011 144 Reads More ...

Turnip

Turnip

When mashed, and mixed with bread and milk, the Turnip makes an excellent cleansing and stimulating poultice for indolent abscesses or sores.

The Scotch eat small, yellow-rooted Turnips as we do radishes. "Tastes and Turnips proverbially differ." At Plymouth, and some other places, when a girl rejects a suitor, she is said to "give him turnips," probably with reference to his sickly pallor of disappointment.

Posted Mar 4, 2011 173 Reads More ...
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This is an excerpt from Herbal Simples by William Thomas Fernie, 1897

Reposted For Interest, Entertainment & Research Only.

Please seek advice from a modern herbalist before using medicinal herbs.