WHAT IS ALITCHI? LYCHEES ( LITCHI CHINENSIS): HEALTH BENEFITS OF LYCHEES USES AND HISTORY: LYCHEE LASSI AND BLUE CHEESE AND LYCHEE DIP

LYCHEES, ALITCHI, LITCHI CHINENSIS
Lychees are a fragrant fruit that has a flowery taste, which some people don’t like; but for others lychees are a fabulous tasting fruit and smell wonderful. When the fruit is ripe you can smell them as you walk past. In Pakistan they are cultivated in the Punjab and people wait eagerly for their first appearance in April or May. They originate from southern China and possibly Vietnam. In China they have grown for around 4000 years and there is a 2000 year old grove of lychee trees in Guadong province. The trees aren’t that old, that’s how long the grove has been in existence. However in some Chinese villages there are trees that are over a thousand years old. In Thailand where they are known as “lynchee,” there are lychee festivals all over the country in May. There are now teas which use lychees and rose petals, made in China and Thailand.
    In China they have the title, “King of Fruits”, but in Pakistan that title is reserved for the mango.
    If you have never seen a fresh lychee, they are one and a half to two inches long and have a shell, usually pink which protects the delicate white of pink-tinged fruit, with a stone in the middle. They are a symbol of love and romance in their native China, as one emperor had them transported 600 miles for his favourite concubine.
    The taste alone should encourage you to eat lychees, but they are also packed full of vitamins, minerals and being chock full of vitamin C help protect of fight off colds, flu, fevers and sore throats. They are a diuretic and aid digestion and the high level of potassium means that they are good for the blood and heart. They also contain traces of selenium, and have calcium, iron, magnesium, phosphorous, zinc, copper manganese in them as well as vitamins B6, and E; thiamin, niacin, riboflavin and folate are also present in them.The zinc content means that they are good for erectile dysfunctions and explains why they are thought to have aphrodisiac qualities. Niacin also helps regulate the sex hormones and helps give you a feeling of well-being.Riboflavin is thought to protect against cancer by neutralizing the free radicals in the body. It also helps protect against cardiovascular disease.
   Lychees can help prevent the growth of some cancerous cells notably in breast cancer, and are good for the skin, bone and tissue. They also boost energy levels.
    They can be used as a glaze over meat such as chicken, and in drinks of the alcoholic kind. Here is a recipe for lychee lassi: 1 cup natural yoghurt, 1 cup chopped lychees, and honey to taste. Blend and serve chilled.
    The recipe below is for an interesting dip.


BLUE CHEESE AND LYCHEE DIP
Ingredients
60 gr blue cheese crumbled (Gorgonzola or Stilton are good)
1 cup soured cream
2 tbsps double cream
¼ cup chopped nut of your choice, (walnuts are good)
1 tsp fresh lemon juice
130 gr lychees, chopped

Method
Blend all the ingredients together, chill and serve with other dips.
This has Taste and is a Treat.

WHAT IS SHAHTOOT? PAKISTANI OR HIMALAYAN MULBERRY: USES AND HOW TO MAKE SHERBAT SHAHTOOT

SHAHTOOT, PAKISTANI OR HIMALAYAN MULBERRIES, (MORUS MACROURA OR SERRATA)
The Shahtoot tree gets its name from Farsi and means King Mulberry. The fruits of the tree may be black, white or red, and were often complained about by the elderly because the falling fruit would stain their courtyards. Children who wanted the fruit were encouraged to clean up the mess it created in return for their healthy harvest. Birds love the mulberry as much as children and the large shahtoots are highly valued, for their surprisingly fine flavour. It can grow to 5 or 6 inches long and has been compared to a long caterpillar. They actually taste a little sweeter than ordinary mulberries which also grow along with shahtoots.
   In the Punjab there used to be a cottage industry built around the shahtoot trees which used to grow near village wells and in fields. Not only were they good for shade in hot summers but the villagers also wove baskets from the tree bark; the larger ones were known as “tokra” and the smaller ones “tokri.” Because the wood from the tree is so flexible children used to make bows and arrows from it and play with them. The trees grew so widely that they were mentioned in folk songs, becoming part of folklore. Now they are a rare sight in Punjab, but there are hopes that they will return, as part of the sericulture program which may run in the province if the government give more help and guidance to villagers who would willingly farm silkworms and make silk for the textile industry if only they knew how to go about it.
   Shahtoots are good for health too and have the same benefits as other mulberries, being rich in antioxidants; flavonoids and what researchers believe are anti-cancer agents.
   In Iran these shahtoots are sold dried and reconstituted for cookery and medicine. They are certainly superfruits that have been known in this part of the world for thousands of years. In the West people are just beginning to realize the benefits of mulberries, and have recently taken to growing the Shahtoot mulberry trees.
  You need to wash shahtoot well and use our mulberry syrup recipe with ice cream. The tea can also be made with shahtoot, but use less sugar.


SHERBAT SHAHTOOT
Ingredients
1 kg. black shahtoot
1 kg water
2 kg sugar

Method
Extract the juice from the shahtoot and strain into a pan. Mix well with the water and add the sugar. Bring to the boil and them lower the heat and stir until it has the consistency of a concentrated cordial or squash.
Remove from the heat. Allow to cool and pour into glass bottles.
When you want a glass, put 3 tbsps of the concentrate into a glass and add water.
This is especially good for sore throats and tonsillitis and for coughs and colds.
This has Taste and is a Treat.

WHAT IS MULBERRY? TOOT, MORUS ALBA, NIGRA AND RUBRA: HEALTH BENEFITS OF MULBERRY USES , HISTORY AND MYTH

MULBERRIES, TOOT, MORUS ALBA, NIGRA AND RUBRA
Mulberry trees are grown in Europe, Asia and the US. The white mulberry tree (Morus alba) originated in China where it has been used extensively in medicine as well as for its delicious fruit. Morus nigra had been cultivated for thousands of years in Europe, and was planted on a wide scale in the belief that silk worms enjoyed the leaves. This proved to be an expensive mistake as they are partial to Morus alba leaves. Morus rubra (red mulberry) is native to the US. All mulberry trees have two characteristics in common. The first is that all parts of the tree have a milky sap and the second is that different shaped leaves can grow on the same tree. The leaves are not of a uniform shape. In Pakistan there is a different kind of mulberry tree, the Shahtoot, which produces large, elongated fruit.
    The mulberry tree has its own children’s rhyme and song in Britain. “Here we go round the mulberry bush… on a cold and frosty morning” and children form a circle around someone or something while dancing around and singing this song.
   In Europe the mulberry tree has a long history. Mulberry trees were planted in Britain by the Romans and Gerard the herbalist wrote about the trees he had in his garden, both black and white mulberries, as being “high and full of boughes” in the 17th century. The black mulberry variety was probably introduced to Europe from Persia.
   We know that the Romans ate mulberries at feasts and Horace recommends (Satires ii) that they be picked just before sunset. They figure in Ovid’s “Metamorphoses” as Pyramus and Thisbe, the star-crossed lovers whose fate was acted out by Bottom and friends in Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, who were murdered under the shade of a white mulberry tree and their blood stained the fruit so that it became dark red.
Pliny wrote of the mulberry tree, “Of all the cultivated trees, the Mulberry is the last to bud, which it never does until the cold weather is past, and it is therefore called the wisest of trees. But when it begins to put forth buds, it dispatches the business in one night and that with so much force that their breaking forth may be clearly heard.” It could be that the trees are called Morus, which means delay in Latin, because of this fact.
The trees were dedicated to the Roman goddess of wisdom, Minerva.
   From Virgil’s Georgics II verse 121 we know that the mulberry tree grew prolifically in Italy and the Black Mulberry tree is depicted in “The House of the Bull” in Pompeii and mulberry leaves figure in the mosaic in “The House of the Faun” there. In Virgil’s day, (he died in 19 BC) it was believed that silk came from the leaves themselves; the ancients did not understand the silk worms were the manufacturers of silk. Sericulture was introduced much later by the Emperor  Justinian from Constantinople, where he ruled from AD 527-65. The poor Italian silk worms were fed on the leaves of the black mulberry tree until 1434 when Morus alba was introduced from the Levantine lands.
    The Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne ordered the mulberry tree to be cultivated on his imperial farm in AD 812 and Syrup of Mulberries gets a mention in the Calendar of Cordova in AD 961, so clearly they were cultivated in Spain. This Syrup or Syrupus Mori was recognized b the British Pharmacopoeia as being an expectorant, slightly laxative and a good gargle for sore throats. Gerard recommends it thus “The barke of the root is bitter, hot and drie, and hath a scouring faculty: the decoction hereof doth open the stoppings of the liver and spleen, it purgeth the belly and driveth forth worms.”
    These days modern medical research is continuing into the benefits of mulberries but they are considered to be another of nature’s superfruits like the kiwi fruit, avocado and pomegranate, as they contain resveratol which is believed to be an anti-cancer agent and may benefit the heart, alleviate chronic inflammation caused by arthritis and arthrosclerosis and postpone the onset of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. Mulberries also contain anthocyanins which are pigments in the fruit and very potent antioxidants which have also shown promising results in fighting cancer. The root bark contains flavonoids which have diuretic and expectorant properties an can increase the level of insulin in the body and decrease blood glucose. Old mulberry leaves are to be avoided though as they are believed to have tranquilizing properties and may cause hallucinations, headaches and upset stomachs. Use young leaves and twigs for tisanes.
   Eating fresh mulberries in season is good for your health, but using the extracts of mulberries for long periods of time is not recommended as they can cause liver and spleen damage. You shouldn’t drink too much mulberry juice or tea or tisanes either as these have the same effect. Allergies associated with the extracts include respiratory problems and chest pains.
    Mulberries are rich in potassium, which is an energy booster and helps repair cell damage and also stimulates the immune system. They also lower cholesterol levels.
The leaves and stem contain the minerals phosphorous, potassium and calcium and act as a diuretic, flushing extra fluids and toxins out of the body. The tisane blocks the absorption of sugars and is useful in a calorie controlled diet. You can make the tisane with fresh or dried leaves by adding 15 gr of leaves to a pot then pouring on just-boiling water and leaving to steep for about 8 minutes. This is good for colds and coughs as well as sore throats.
   If you steep leaves in olive oil or coconut oil for several days you can use the oil for skin problems and it is especially good for dry or irritated skin. Mulberries generally help the skin and slow its ageing process. If you boil mulberry leaves and put your head over the steam it will act as a good facial cleanser. Remove the pan from the heat and put a towel over your head and then lean over the steam. Afterwards rinse your skin with cold water.
  There have been many famous mulberry trees in Britain; one of them was reputedly planted by the botanist Turner in 1548 at Syon House, Brentford. In 1608 James Introduced sericulture (the culture of silkworms) to Britain and an edict encouraged the cultivation of mulberry trees. This was an unsuccessful enterprise however as the trees were of the black variety. One of these trees,(from the four acres of mulberry gardens James I had planted near the Palace of Westminster) was supposed to have been taken to Stratford-upon–Avon by the Bard, William Shakespeare, who planted it at his home in New Place. Descendants from this particular plant were said to be the ones found in Kew, in the Royal Botanical Gardens. The site of James I’s mulberry garden is now the site of the private gardens of Buckingham Palace, but there is only one remaining mulberry tree now.
   The tree in Stratford now is said to be a descendant of the Bard’s tree as the original was cut down by the next owner of New Place, one Reverend Francis Gastrell, who reportedly was fed up with people staring at the tree. He was further infuriated by the Land Taxes, perhaps the reason for cutting down the tree and tore the house down too. He was then hounded out of Stratford by the furious locals and no one named Gastrell was allowed to live there again under a local law. So whatever mulberry tree you may now see in Stratford, it is not the original one.
    In 1608-9 Christ College Cambridge along with other colleges planted 300 mulberry trees, and the one that grows in the grounds now may be the one tree remaining from that time..
  Mulberry trees are very resilient and can continue growing if they have shoots even if they fall down. They can spring up from buds and a dormant bud lying near an old tree can germinate if the original dies. These mulberry trees can grow to around 30 to 50 feet tall, but the American Morus rubra can grow to heights of 60 – 70 feet. Paper can be made from the bark of these trees and the Maisin people of Papua New Guinea resisted the temptation to sell their ancestral lands- consisting of rainforest- and chose instead to preserve their heritage and make a livelihood from making cloth, called Tapa cloth, from the bark of their mulberry trees. They are being assisted in marketing this cloth by ‘Green’ organizations.
   Mulberry fruit, leaves stem, bark and roots have been used in traditional medicine around the world to cure colds, constipation, diarrhoea, headaches, melancholy, hypertension, inflammation, insomnia, snakebites, bronchitis and asthma as well as other ailments, so the trees have many uses and benefits. The side effects come from the older leaves and the extracts on the food supplement market. Eat the fresh fruit in season with immunity.
  The syrup in the recipe below can be served over ice cream too. The tea is very refreshing on a hot summer’s day.

MULBERRY ICED TEA
Ingredients
2 cups black mulberries, washed
½ lemon, juice and zest (finely grated)
½-1 cup sugar
1 cup water
3 tbsps green tea leaves or 4 tea bags green, white or black
ice

Method
Put the mulberries and lemon zest in a saucepan, and sprinkle the sugar over them. Add the lemon juice and water and bring to the boil, stirring until the liquid boils.
Remove from the heat and mash the berries then put back on the heat and simmer for 2 mins.
Remove the pan from the heat and strain the juice into a heat-proof jug. Chill in the fridge.
Make a pot of tea and then put the jug in a bowl of ice to cool it quickly, then put in the fridge.
When both liquids are chilled put ice in a tall glass and pour the mulberry syrup over it. Add the tea.
This has Taste and is a Treat.



KIWI FRUIT ( ACTINIDIA DELICOSA): HEALTH BENEFITS OF KIWI FRUIT USES AND HISTORY: LIME AND KIWI FRUIT MOUSSE RECIPE

KIWI FRUIT (ACTINIDIA DELICOSA)
Kiwi fruit or kiwifruit is a relative newcomer to the West. It originated in China, Siberia and Korea and was taken to New Zealand at the turn of the 20th century by a missionary, Isabel Frazier. In China it is known as the ‘sunny peach’ (Yang Tao) or the macaque peach (Mikou Tao). Its name comes from the Maori as does the name of the kiwi bird native to New Zealand and nowhere else. New Zealanders and the New Zealand dollar are also known as kiwis.
   The kiwi fruit was first exported from New Zealand to Britain in 1952, and was first harvested in California in 1970. By 1960 it had earned the name Chinese Gooseberry, although it is not a member of the gooseberry family. Now they grow in Italy, France, and Greece as well as in the countries which have traditionally grown them. They grow on vines that look a lot like trees when they are mature. In 1991 a new variety of kiwi fruit was harvested, with a golden, yellow interior instead of the usual green.
  It has a hairy exterior skin which should not be eaten if the fruit has been grown commercially as it will contain pesticides. However if you grow your own kiwi fruit it's fine to eat the skin in the same way New Zealanders do. The appearance of the fruit prompted this response from the US humorist, Erma Bombeck, “Someone once threw me a small, brown, hairy kiwifruit and I threw a wastebasket over it until it was dead." The kiwifruit is another of nature’s superfruits like the pommelo and the pomegranate, as it has high flavonoid content and is rich in vitamins C and E as well as containing a great deal of potassium. Of the top 26 fruits that we eat, it is the most nutrient rich. It has more potassium in it than bananas or citrus fruits as well as more vitamin C and E. It also contains folic acid and folate, pantothetic acid, calcium, magnesium, iron, copper, vitamin B6, while the seeds have oil which contains omega-3 fatty acids, phosphorous and traces of beta-carotene. 
   In the laboratory (in vitro) it has been found to inhibit melanoma (skin cancer) and may help prevent the clogging of arteries. It has a powerful antioxidant action in the body and so can help thin the blood so preventing blood clots. It helps reduce the signs of ageing of the skin and the skins and some of the fruit make an excellent face mask to rejuvenate mature skin. The ascorbic acid it contains helps tighten the skin and pores and is very refreshing.
   The potassium and other minerals improve the nerves functioning and the lutein, a photochemical in the fruit, is linked to the prevention of prostate and lung cancers.
   Because kiwis are also high in dietary fibre, they inhibit constipation and so help to prevent colon cancer and help the digestive process. The chlorophyllin (from chlorophyll) may be an inhibitor of liver cancer too, and this helps the liver function normally.
   Studies in Italy on children have shown that a diet including kiwis can help treat asthma and lowers the risks of them contracting respiratory ailments, such as wheezing, shortness of breath, coughs, colds etc.
   Kiwi fruit can also aid in prevention of nitro-saturation which can occur when nitrates from smoked or barbecued foods are consumed. Nitrates are carcinogenic, so the cancer risks are lowered if you eat kiwi fruits.


LIME AND KIWI FRUIT MOUSSE
Ingredients
4 kiwis, peeled
1 lime, juice and zest
3½ fl.oz double cream
1¾ fl.oz sugar syrup
1¼ oz castor sugar
1 inch piece of ginger root peeled and chopped
a little water
2 kiwi fruit sliced for garnish
sprigs of mint for garnish

Method
Put all the ingredients (except those for the garnishes) in a blender or food processor and blend until smooth and thick.
Put into sundae glasses and chill for 30 mins. Serve garnished with slices of kiwi fruit and sprigs of mint.
This has Taste and is a Treat.