☆ What is nigella sativa? and how good is it to consume for our health? ☆

What is nigella sativa? and how good is it to consume for our health?
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  Answer:

Nigella

(NIGELLA SATIVA L.) Black Cumin, Fitch (Biblical), Love in the Mist, Fitches

Parts Used: seeds

Energy and Flavors: Hot energy, spicy flavor

Systems Affected: Lungs, Stomach, spleen

Uses: The common name "love in the mist" aptly describes the poetry of this exquisite plant. In the garden, one easily imagines etheric spirits flitting about amongst its evanescent bluish-white blossoms. Even the seedpods, which are so often used in dried flower arrangements, suggest an otherworldly sense of exotic enchantment. Is it possible that such a delicately beautiful herb, with such potent medicinal properties would be so hardy as to easily reseed itself in our gardens year after year?

The seeds are used both as a condiment in bread and cakes and various confections and like pepper or combined with pepper such as cayenne in sauces. The Ethiopians add along with other spices to flavor local alcoholic beverages. Still another use is to sprinkle them with woolen garments as a moth repellant.

The major uses are

upper respiratory conditions,

allergies,

coughs,

colds,

bronchitis,

fevers,

flu,

asthma

and emphysema for which it is effective.

Simply collect the abundance of seeds from the pods and grind them to a paste and mix with melted honey to a 'hahlava' (a Middle Eastern confection usually made with toasted sesame seeds and honey). Jim Duke confirms its folk use for these and a wide variety of other diseases and conditions including bilious ailments, calluses, cancer, colic, corns, eruptions, headache, jaundice, myrmecia, orchitis, puerperal fever, sclerosis, skin, snakebite, stomachache, swellings, tumors of the abdomen and eyes, and warts. In Algeria, the roasted seeds are combined with butter for cough and honey and taken for colic.


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