Chicory Explained

Common chicory (Cichorium intybus)[1] is a somewhat woody, perennial herbaceous plant of the family Asteraceae, usually with bright blue flowers, rarely white or pink. Native to Europe, it has been introduced to the Americas and Australia.[2]

Many varieties are cultivated for salad leaves, chicons (blanched buds), or roots (var. sativum), which are baked, ground, and used as a coffee substitute and food additive. In the 21st century, inulin, an extract from chicory root, has been used in food manufacturing as a sweetener and source of dietary fiber.[3] Chicory is also grown as a forage crop for livestock.[4]

Description

When flowering, chicory has a tough, grooved, and more or less hairy stem. It can grow to 1.5abbr=offNaNabbr=off tall.[5] The leaves are stalked, lanceolate and unlobed; they range from NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) in length (smallest near the top)[6] and NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) wide. The flower heads are NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) wide, and usually light blue or lavender; it has also rarely been described as white or pink. Of the two rows of involucral bracts, the inner is longer and erect, the outer is shorter and spreading. It flowers from March until October. The seed has small scales at the tip.

Chemistry

Substances which contribute to the plant's bitterness are primarily the two sesquiterpene lactones, lactucin and lactucopicrin. Other components are aesculetin, aesculin, cichoriin, umbelliferone, scopoletin, 6,7-dihydrocoumarin, and further sesquiterpene lactones and their glycosides.[7] Around 1970, it was discovered that the root contains up to 20% inulin, a polysaccharide similar to starch.

Names

Common chicory is also known as blue daisy, blue dandelion, blue sailors, blue weed, bunk, coffeeweed, cornflower, hendibeh, horseweed, ragged sailors, succory, wild bachelor's buttons, and wild endive.[8] ("Cornflower" is also commonly applied to Centaurea cyanus.) Common names for varieties of var. foliosum include endive, radicchio, radichetta, Belgian endive, French endive, red endive, sugarloaf, and witloof (or witlof).[9]

Distribution and habitat

Chicory is native to western Asia, North Africa, and Europe. It lives as a wild plant on roadsides in Europe. The plant was brought to North America by early European colonists.[10] It is also common in China, and Australia, where it has become widely naturalized.[11] [12] [13]

It is more common in areas with abundant rain.

Ecology

Chicory is both a cultivated crop and a weedy plant with a cosmopolitan distribution. Analysis of introduced weedy populations in North America has revealed that naturalized weedy chicory is partially descended from domesticated cultivars.[14]

Chicory grows in roadsides, waste places, and other disturbed areas, and can survive in lawns due to its ability to resprout from its low basal rosette of leaves. It typically does not enter undisturbed natural areas.[15] [16] It most prefers limestone soils, but tolerates an array of conditions. Bees, butterflies, and flies feed upon it. Chicory is classified as a drought tolerant plant. [17]

Uses

Culinary

The entire plant is edible.[18]

Raw chicory leaves are 92% water, 5% carbohydrates, 2% protein, and contain negligible fat (table). In a 100-gram (3½ oz) reference amount, raw chicory leaves provide 23cal and significant amounts (more than 20% of the Daily Value) of vitamin K, vitamin A, vitamin C, some B vitamins, and manganese. Vitamin E and calcium are present in moderate amounts. Raw endive is 94% water and has low nutrient content.

Root chicory

Root chicory (Cichorium intybus var. sativum) has long been cultivated in Europe as a coffee substitute.[19] The roots are baked, roasted, ground, and used as an additive, especially in the Mediterranean region (where the plant is native). As a coffee additive, it is also mixed in Indian filter coffee and in parts of Southeast Asia, South Africa, and the southern United States, particularly in New Orleans. In France, a mixture of 60% chicory and 40% coffee is sold under the trade name Ricoré. It has been more widely used during economic crises such as the Great Depression in the 1930s and during World War II in Continental Europe. Chicory, with sugar beet and rye, was used as an ingredient of the East German (mixed coffee), introduced during the "East German coffee crisis" of 1976–1979. It is also added to coffee in Spanish, Greek, Turkish, Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian cuisines.[20]

Some beer brewers use roasted chicory to add flavor to stouts (commonly expected to have a coffee-like flavor). Others have added it to strong blond Belgian-style ales, to augment the hops, making a, from the Dutch name for the plant.

The roots can also be cooked like parsnips.[21]

Leaf chicory

Wild

While edible raw, wild chicory leaves usually have a bitter taste, especially the older leaves.[22] The flavor is appreciated in certain cuisines, such as in the Ligurian and Apulian regions of Italy and also in the southern part of India. In Ligurian cuisine, wild chicory leaves are an ingredient of preboggion and in the Apulian region, wild chicory leaves are combined with fava bean puree in the traditional local dish fave e cicorie selvatiche.[23] In Albania, the leaves are used as a spinach substitute, mainly served simmered and marinated in olive oil, or as ingredient for fillings of byrek. In Greece a variety of wild chicory found in Crete and known as stamnagathi (spiny chicory) is used as a salad served with olive oil and lemon juice.

By cooking and discarding the water, the bitterness is reduced, after which the chicory leaves may be sautéed with garlic, anchovies, and other ingredients. In this form, the resulting greens might be combined with pasta[24] or accompany meat dishes.[25]

Cultivated

Chicory may be cultivated for its leaves, usually eaten raw as salad leaves. Cultivated chicory is generally divided into three types, of which there are many varieties:

Although leaf chicory is often called "endive", true endive (Cichorium endivia) is a different species in the same genus, distinct from Belgian endive.[29]

Chicory root and inulin

Inulin is mainly found in the plant family Asteraceae as a storage carbohydrate (for example Jerusalem artichoke, dahlia, yacon, etc.). It is used as a sweetener in the food industry, with 10% of the sweetening power of sucrose[30] and is sometimes added to yogurts as a 'prebiotic'.[31]

Fresh chicory root may contain 13–23% inulin as a percentage of its total carbohydrate content.[32]

Traditional use

Chicory root contains essential oils similar to those found in plants in the related genus Tanacetum.[33] In alternative medicine, chicory has been listed as one of the 38 plants used to prepare Bach flower remedies.[34]

Forage

Chicory is highly digestible for ruminants and has a low fiber concentration.[35] Chicory roots were once considered an "excellent substitute for oats" for horses due to their protein and fat content.[36] Chicory contains a low quantity of reduced tannins that may increase protein utilization efficiency in ruminants.

Some tannins reduce intestinal parasites.[37] [38] Dietary chicory may be toxic to internal parasites, with studies of ingesting chicory by farm animals having lower worm burdens, leading to its use as a forage supplement.[39] [40] [41] Although chicory might have originated in France, Italy and India,[42] much development of chicory for use with livestock has been undertaken in New Zealand.[43]

Forage varieties

Others varieties known include; 'Chico', 'Ceres Grouse', 'Good Hunt', 'El Nino' and 'Lacerta'.

History

The plant has a history reaching back to ancient Egypt. In ancient Rome, a dish called puntarelle was made with chicory sprouts.[52] It was mentioned by Horace in reference to his own diet, which he describes as very simple: Latin: Me pascunt olivae, me cichorea levesque [[malva]]e ("As for me, olives, endives, and light mallows provide sustenance").[53] Chicory was first described as a cultivated plant in the 17th century.[54] When coffee was introduced to Europe, the Dutch thought that chicory made a lively addition to the bean drink.

In 1766, Frederick the Great banned the importation of coffee into Prussia, leading to the development of a coffee substitute by Brunswick innkeeper Christian Gottlieb Förster (died 1801), who gained a concession in 1769–70 to manufacture it in Brunswick and Berlin. By 1795, 22 to 24 factories of this type were in Brunswick.[55] [56] Lord Monboddo describes the plant in 1779[57] as the "chicoree", which the French cultivated as a pot herb. In Napoleonic Era France, chicory frequently appeared as an adulterant in coffee, or as a coffee substitute.[58] Chicory was also adopted as a coffee substitute by Confederate soldiers during the American Civil War, and has become common in the United States. It was also used in the United Kingdom during the Second World War, where Camp Coffee, a coffee and chicory essence, has been on sale since 1885.[59]

In the U.S., chicory root has long been used as a coffee substitute in prisons.[60] By the 1840s, the port of New Orleans was the second-largest importer of coffee (after New York). Louisianans began to add chicory root to their coffee when Union naval blockades during the American Civil War cut off the port of New Orleans, thereby creating a long-standing tradition.

In culture

Chicory is mentioned in certain ancient Chinese texts about silk production. Amongst traditional recommendations the primary caretaker of the silkworms, the "silkworm mother", should not eat or even touch it.[61] [62]

The chicory flower is often seen as inspiration for the Romantic concept of the Blue Flower (e.g. in German language Blauwarte ≈ blue lookout by the wayside). Similar to the springwort and moonwort, it could open locked doors, according to European folklore.[63] [64] However, the plant must be gathered at noon or midnight on St. James's Day and cut with gold while being silent, or else one would die afterwards.

Chicory was also believed to grant its possessor invisibility.

See also

External links

Edible parts and identification of wild Chicory.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cichorium intybus . FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN . 2013-12-16 . 2013-05-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130523061502/http://ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/cropView?id=694 . dead .
  2. Web site: Cichorium intybus L.. Plants of the World Online. 18 February 2023.
  3. 21198631. 2011. Raninen. K. Dietary fiber type reflects physiological functionality: Comparison of grain fiber, inulin, and polydextrose. Nutrition Reviews. 69. 1. 9–21. Lappi. J. Mykkänen. H. Poutanen. K. 10.1111/j.1753-4887.2010.00358.x. free.
  4. Book: Nutrition and Feeding of Organic Cattle . 978-1-84593-758-4 . Blair . Robert . 2011-04-30.
  5. Book: Elias. Thomas S.. Edible Wild Plants: A North American Field Guide to Over 200 Natural Foods. Dykeman. Peter A.. Sterling. 2009. 978-1-4027-6715-9. New York. 115. 244766414. 1982.
  6. Book: Spellenberg, Richard . National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers: Western Region . Knopf . 2001 . 978-0-375-40233-3 . rev . 366 . 1979.
  7. Harsh Pal Bais, GA Ravishankar (2001) Cichorium intybus L – cultivation, processing, utility, value addition and biotechnology, with an emphasis on current status and future prospects. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 81, 467–484.
  8. Web site: John Cardina . Cathy Herms . Tim Koch . Ted Webster . Chickory Cichorium intybus . February 25, 2013 . Ohio Perennial & Biennial Weed Guide . Ohio State University OARDC Extension.
  9. Benigni . M. . Bompeix . G. . Chemical and biological control of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum in witloof chicory culture. . Pest Manag. Sci. . 2010 . 66 . 12 . 1332–1336 . 10.1002/ps.2019. 20839264 .
  10. Book: Lyle, Katie Letcher . The Complete Guide to Edible Wild Plants, Mushrooms, Fruits, and Nuts: How to Find, Identify, and Cook Them . . 2010 . 978-1-59921-887-8 . 2nd . Guilford, CN . 10 . 560560606 . 2004.
  11. Web site: Cichorium intybus . 23 March 2014 . Flora of North America.
  12. Web site: Cichorium intybus in Flora of China @ efloras.org. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303183748/http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200023652. dead. March 3, 2016. www.efloras.org.
  13. Web site: Species: Cichorium intybus (Chicory). https://web.archive.org/web/20160305013336/http://bie.ala.org.au/species/Cichorium%2Bintybus. dead. Atlas of Living. Australia. March 5, 2016. bie.ala.org.au.
  14. Zavada . Tomas . Malik . Rondy J. . Kesseli . Rick V. . Population structure in chicory (Cichorium intybus): A successful U.S. weed since the American revolutionary war . Ecology and Evolution . 2017 . 7 . 12. 4209–4219 . 10.1002/ece3.2994 . 2017EcoEv...7.4209Z . free . 28649334 . 5478081 .
  15. Web site: Chicory, Cichorium intybus . University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  16. Web site: Dorman . Kathryn . Chicory- weed or flower? . Penn State Extension.
  17. Web site: University . Utah State . Chicory . 2024-06-20 . extension.usu.edu . en.
  18. Book: The Complete Guide to Edible Wild Plants . . . 2009 . 978-1-60239-692-0 . New York . 42 . en-US . 277203364.
  19. Web site: Laurie Neverman. Chicory - The "Coffee Root" Plant. 31 August 2018.
  20. Web site: Wild Herbs of Turkey . Tijen İnaltong . Turkish Cultural Foundation . 2013-12-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130116115552/http://www.turkish-cuisine.org/english/pages.php?ParentID=5&FirstLevel=53&SecondLevel=61 . 2013-01-16 .
  21. Book: Nyerges . Christopher . Foraging Wild Edible Plants of North America: More than 150 Delicious Recipes Using Nature's Edibles . 2016 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-1-4930-1499-6 . 57 .
  22. Book: Nyerges, Christopher. Foraging Washington: Finding, Identifying, and Preparing Edible Wild Foods. Falcon Guides. 2017. 978-1-4930-2534-3. Guilford, CT. 965922681.
  23. Web site: Kyle Phillips . Fava Bean Puree with Wild Chicory Recipe - Fave e Cicorie Selvatiche . About.com . 2013-12-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131115192015/http://italianfood.about.com/od/chickpeaslentils/r/blr1898.htm . 2013-11-15 . dead .
  24. Web site: Wild Chicory Spaghetti . Nudo Italia . Dolce Vita Diaries . 2009-05-19 . 2013-12-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110113155934/http://dolcevitadiaries.co.uk/2009/05/19/wild-chicory-spaghetti/ . 2011-01-13 . dead .
  25. Jaume Fàbrega, El gust d'un poble: els plats més famosos de la cuina catalana. Llomillo fregit amb xicoires
  26. Web site: Yeoman . Andrew . 1 March 2001 . Belgian Endives . 21 September 2022 . BCLiving.
  27. Web site: Belgian endive- Cichorium intybus . The Food Museum . https://web.archive.org/web/20050729081033/http://www.foodmuseum.com/endive.html . 2005-07-29.
  28. Web site: About. Frenchvegetables.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130116115552/http://www.frenchvegetables.com/about/. 2013-01-16.
  29. Web site: Endive, Chicory and Witloof . 2013-12-16 . Aggie Horticulture . Texas AgriLife Extension Service, Texas A&M System.
  30. Web site: Joseph O'Neill . Using inulin and oligofructose with high-intensity sweeteners . Penton . New Hope 360 . 2008-06-01 . 2013-12-16 . dead . https://archive.today/20120731112515/http://www.functionalingredientsmag.com/article/Formulations/using-inulin-and-oligofructose-with-high-intensity-sweeteners.aspx . 2012-07-31 .
  31. Madrigal L. Sangronis E. "Inulin and derivates as key ingredients in functional foods. [Review]" [Spanish] Archivos Latinoamericanos de Nutricion. 57(4):387-96, 2007 Dec.
  32. 10.2135/cropsci2004.0748 . Wilson . Robert . Crop Sci. . 44 . 3 . 748–752 . 2004 . Chicory Root Yield and Carbohydrate Composition is Influenced by Cultivar Selection, Planting, and Harvest Date . 2008-08-20 . S . Y . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081013213941/http://crop.scijournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/44/3/748 . 2008-10-13 .
  33. Edible and Medicinal Plants of the West, Gregory L. Tilford,
  34. Book: D. S. Vohra. Bach Flower Remedies: A Comprehensive Study. 2 September 2013. 1 June 2004. B. Jain Publishers. 978-81-7021-271-3. 3.
  35. Book: Advances in agronomy . 978-0-12-000786-8 . Agronomy . American Society of . 2005-10-25. Gulf Professional .
  36. Book: Donegan, Alfred W. . Commerce reports . Bureau Of Foreign And Domestic Commerce . 1915.
  37. Web site: Tannins, Nutrition and Internal Parasites . NR International . 2008-12-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081210060232/http://www.smallstock.info/info/feedhealth/tannins.htm.
  38. Kidane . A. Houdijk JG. Athanasiadou S. Tolkamp BJ. Kyriazakis I. . 2010 . Effects of maternal protein nutrition and subsequent grazing on chicory (Cichorium intybus) on parasitism and performance of lambs . Journal of Animal Science . 88 . 4. 1513–21 . 10.2527/jas.2009-2530. 20023143 .
  39. Individual administration of three tanniferous forage plants to lambs artificially infected with Haemonchus contortus and Cooperia curticei . Vet. Parasitol. . 146 . 1–2 . 123–34 . 2007-05-15 . 10.1016/j.vetpar.2007.01.009 . 17336459 . Heckendorn . F . Häring . DA . Maurer . V . Senn . M . Hertzberg . H .
  40. The use of chicory for parasite control in organic ewes and their lambs . Parasitology . 134 . Pt 2 . 299–307 . February 2007 . 10.1017/S0031182006001363 . 17032469 . Athanasiadou, S. . Gray . D . Younie . D . Tzamaloukas . O . Jackson . F . Kyriazakis . I . 20439889 .
  41. Tzamaloukas . O . The effect of chicory (Cichorium intybus) and sulla (Hedysarum coronarium) on larval development and mucosal cell responses of growing lambs challenged with Teladorsagia circumcincta . Parasitology . 132 . Pt 3 . 419–26 . March 2006 . 10.1017/S0031182005009194 . 16332288 . Athanasiadou . S . Kyriazakis . I . Huntley . JF . Jackson . F . 19505377 .
  42. Web site: Thomas . Rans . Chicory: A Powerful Perennial . Quality Deer Management Association . 29 September 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120111104203/http://www.qdma.com/what-we-do/articles/food-plotshabitat/chicory/ . dead . 11 January 2012. 2012-01-11 .
  43. Web site: Making good use of chicory . 2011-03-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110727162720/http://www.ruralliving.co.nz/cms/special_feature/pasture_management/2011/03/making_good_use_of_chicory.php . 2011-07-27.
  44. Gene Logsdon
  45. Donald L. Sparks (Editor)
  46. Donald L. Sparks (Editor)
  47. Book: Nelson . C. Jerry . Redfearn . Daren D. . Moore . Kenneth J. . Collins . Michael . 2020 . Forages, Volume 2, The Science of Grassland Agriculture . West Sussex, England . Wiley . 354 . 9781119436614 . rapid recovery from grazing.
  48. Ashton Acton (Editor)
  49. Kenneth J. Moore, Michael Collins, C. Jerry Nelson and Daren D. Redfearn (Editors)
  50. Peter J. Fiduccia
  51. Steven T. Koike, Peter Gladders and Albert Paulus
  52. Web site: Rome food and cuisine . Rome.info . 2013-12-16.
  53. Horace, Odes 1.31, ca 30 BC
  54. Book: Prance . Ghillean . Nesbitt . Mark . Pieroni . Andrea . Andrea Pieroni . 2005 . The Cultural History of Plants . Routledge . 40 . 0415927463.
  55. Book: Thomas Hengartner . Christoph Maria Merki . Genußmittel. Campus Verlag . Frankfurt a. M. New York . 1999. 978-3-593-36337-0.
  56. Book: Carl Philipp Ribbentrop . Vollständige Geschichte und Beschreibung der Stadt Braunschweig. . 2 . Braunschweig. 1796 . 146–148 . de.
  57. Letter from Monboddo to John Hope, 29 April 1779; reprinted by William Knight 1900
  58. Book: Guas, David . Raquel Pelzel . DamGood Sweet: Desserts to Satisfy Your Sweet Tooth, New Orleans Style . . 2009 . . 60–64 . 978-1-60085-118-6.
  59. Web site: BBC - A History of the World: Original Camp Coffee label . . 16 September 2021 . BBC .
  60. (a) Delaney, John H. "New York (State). Dept. of Efficiency and Economy Annual Report". Albany New York, 1915, p. 673. Accessed via Google Books.
    (b) "Prison Talk" website; Kentucky section: Web site: Current Food Service Vendor Contract for another 4 yrs. UPDATED . 2008-03-18 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20160313140240/http://prisontalk.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-173368.html . 2016-03-13 . .
  61. Web site: Around silk: raising silk worms . Au Ver a Soie . 22 January 2023.
  62. Web site: The sheen of romance . Taiwan Today . 22 January 2023.
  63. Howard, Michael. Traditional Folk Remedies (Century, 1987), p.120.
  64. Book: Radford, Edwin . Encyclopaedia of superstitions . 1961 . Christina Hole, M. A. Radford . 0-09-125200-8 . Revised and enlarged edition by Christina Hole . London . 840105.