Flowers are not just for decoration. They make for excellent food, too
“Which is fairer, flower or leaf” asks Robert Frost in a
poem musing upon a tree, comparing its leaves and flowers. Green leaves
get superlatives for its nutritive value. We are encouraged by
nutritionists and Popeye alike to chew on bunches of them for the sake
of our heart, blood, muscles and what else. If you thought flowers
merely decorate and scent our life through poojas, potpourris and bridal
beds, think again!
For here is a posy of unlikely floral delicacies:
Pumpkin:
These large, cheerfully yellow blooms are high in Vitamin A and
providing more than 50 per cent of our daily need in just a single cup.
They have considerable folate and iron content. In Kerala, pumpkin
blossoms along with its tender stem are cut, wilted and seasoned with
mustard seeds, curry leaves, jeera and coconut gratings to make
“thoran”. The blossoms may be dipped whole in spiced besan batter, fried
and served as fritters, or torn up and put in salads to add colour and
appeal.
Drumstick:
These diminutive creamy white flowers of the Moringa tree are fragrant
and tasty. Excellent sources of calcium and potassium, its juice
increases lactation in nursing mothers. Its tea is used to clear a cold
or flush out urinary infections. The blossoms can garnish any sweet dish
or be sautéed along with its leaves.
Banana:
Common in South India and Sri Lanka, it is delicious when prepared with
coconut gratings, jeera, green chillis and moong dal. A cup of raw
banana flowers gives 60 per cent of our daily requirement of Vitamin C,
40 per cent of potassium, a fair deal of iron and an astounding 10 grams
of fibre.
Hibiscus:
Kerala can’t do without its
chembarathi
for beauty and health. They are ground into chutney, made into a thoran,
turned into a fruit drink or eaten raw when a bud. A drink made from
dried calyx of the flower is very popular as Karkade in the Middle
Eastern countries while the rest of the world drinks it as hibiscus tea.
Hibiscus tea is huge in iron reserves, Vitamins B1 and C. Western
doctors acknowledge that 3 cups of hibiscus tea daily can reduce blood
pressure (in mild and pre-hypertensive patients and type 2 diabetics
with high blood pressure), which is comparable with certain
antihypertensive medications.
Coconut:
This looks not quite the flower one imagines. Yet, in rural Kerala
kitchens, the tender sweet flowers are enjoyed raw, stir-fried as a side
dish to rice or ground with rice and coconut sugar and cooked into
gruel to give lactating moms. Coconut sugar made from sap of coconut
inflorescences has a low Glycemic Index as against refined sugar. (The writer is a nutritionist)
No comments:
Post a Comment