BeetrootsFamily: N.O. Chenopodiaceae---Synonyms---Spinach Beet. Sea Beet. Garden Beet. White Beet. Mangel Wurzel.---Parts Used---Leaves, root.
---Description---Beta vulgaris (Linn.) is a native of South Europe, extensively cultivated as an article of food and especially for the production of sugar, and presents many varieties. It is derived from the Sea Beet (B. maritima, Linn.), which grows wild on the coasts of Europe, North Africa and Asia, as far as India, and is found in muddy maritime marshes in many parts of England, a tall, succulent plant, about 2 feet high, with large, fleshy, glossy leaves, angular stems and numerous leafy spikes of green flowers, much like those of the Stinking Goosefoot. The lower leaves, when boiled, are quite equal in taste to Spinach, and the leaf-stalks and midrib of a cultivated form, the Spinach Beet (B. vulgaris, var. cicla), are sometimes stewed, under the name of Swiss Chard (being the Poirée à Carde of the French, with whom it is served as Sea Kale or Asparagus). This white-rooted Beet is also cultivated for its leaves, which are put into soups, or used as spinach, and in France are often mixed with sorrel, to lessen its acidity. It is also largely used as a decorative plant for its large handsome leaves, blood red or variegated in colour. Its root, thoughcontaining almost as much sugar as the red Garden Beet, neither looks so appetizing nor tastes so well. The Mangel Wurzel, or Mangold, also a variety of the Beet, too coarse for table use, is good for cattle, who thrive excellently upon this diet, both its leaves and roots affording an abundance of valuable and nutritious food. In its uncultivated form, the root of the Sea Beet is coarse and unfit for food, nor has any use been made of the plant medicinally, but the Garden Beet has been cultivated from very remote times as a salad plant and for general use as a vegetable. It was so appreciated by the ancients, that it is recorded that it was offered on silver to Apollo in his temple at Delphi. ---Constituents---The root contains about a tenth portion of pure sugar, which is one of the glucoses or fruit sugars and is very wholesome. It is softer than cane sugar and does not crystallize as well as the latter. There is a treacle principle in it, but this renders it all the more nutritious. Canesugar has to be converted by the digestive juices into fruit sugar, before the body can absorb it, but the sugar present in the Beetroot is already in the more easily assimilated form, thus making the Beet a valuable food. Its sugar is a force-giver and an energy creator, a source of vitality to the human body. Besides its tenth portion of pure sugar, Beetroot has as much as a third of its weight in starch and gum. The Beet makes an appetizing vegetable, plain boiled, stewed, or baked and a good pickle, and in Russia forms an appetizing soup - called Bortsch - the red root in this case being made to exude all its juice into a rich, white stock. A pleasant wine can be made from the roots and an equally good domestic ale has also been brewed from Mangolds. A considerable amount of alcohol can be obtained by distillation. Although modern medicine disregards the Beet, of old it was considered to have distinct remedial properties. [Top]
The juice of the Red Beetroot was recommended 'to stay the bloody flux' and 'to help the yellow jaundice,' also the juice 'put into the nostrils, purgeth the head, helpeth the noise in the ears and the toothache.' The Sugar Beet, or White Beet, is a selected form of the ordinary red-rooted Garden Beet and is now the chief source of our sugar; as food for animals, it has been preferred to turnips and carrots. About 1760, the Berlin apothecary Marggraff obtained in his laboratory by means of alcohol, 6.2 per cent. of sugar from a white variety of Beet and 4.5 per cent. from a red variety. At the present day, as a result of careful study of many years, improvement of cultivation, careful selection of seed and suitable manuring, especially with nitrate of soda, the average Beet worked up contains 7 per cent. of fibre and 92 per cent. of juice. The average yield of its weight in sugar was stated in 1910 to be 12.79 per cent. in Germany and 11.6 per cent. in France. In Great Britain, the cultivation of Beet for sugar was first seriously undertaken in Essex in 1910, as the result of careful consideration during several years and since the War. The Beet Sugar Industry, aided by Government subsidy, can now be regarded as on a permanent basis. In 1926-7, no less than fourteen factories were handling the Beet crops, mostly in Norfolk, Cambridgeshire, Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire, producing large quantities of white refined sugar. See:
[Top] Purchase this Herb from Botanical.com © Copyright Protected 1995-2004 botanical.com |
|
GuestBook |
Copyright(s) © 1991-2012: Lenni Lenape Phoenix, Native American Embassy, Mandy & NATIVE ENIT, Native American Holocaust Museum, Inc., Minister Jessie Renee (Von Noaker) ThunderWolfe, Priscylla Belle Venticello, Von Noaker Family Publishing Group International North American Homeless Ombudsman Council
Copying in any form or medium is strictly forbidden without prior written permission: Illegal copying (Taking Possession of) anything within this Web Domain contitutes "Criminal Theft of (Intelectual) Property & will be treated as such! |
|
VISITOR STATISTICS: TREEPAD
|
CONTACT INFORMATION: NATIVE AMERICAN EMBASSY 1413 Union Avenue McKeesport, Pennsylvania 15132 USA PHONE: [VOICEMAIL ONLY HOTLINE (News, Reports, etc.)]: (412) 436-3866 Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh Office: (412) 689-9051 Pennsylvania, Johnstown Office: Private: Auto Transfers To Hawaiian Office HAWAIIAN OFFICE & MAIN NORTH AMERICAN (U.S.) OFFICE: (808) 445-6576 NEW YORK OFFICE: (631) 913-3475 OKLAHOMA OFFICE: (405) 225-6124 |
|