Sesbania grandiflora explained

Sesbania grandiflora,[1] commonly known as vegetable hummingbird, katurai, agati, or West Indian pea, is a small leguminous tree native to Maritime Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. It has edible flowers and leaves commonly eaten in Southeast Asia and South Asia.[2]

Description

Sesbania grandiflora is a fast-growing tree. The leaves are regular and rounded and the flowers white, red or pink. The fruits look like flat, long, thin green beans. The tree thrives under full exposure to sunshine and is extremely frost sensitive.

It is a small soft wooded tree up to NaN0NaN0 tall. Leaves are NaN0NaN0 long, with leaflets in 10–20 pairs or more and an odd one. Flowers are oblong, NaN0NaN0 long in lax, with two to four flower racemes. The calyx is campanulate and shallowly two-lipped. Pods are slender, falcate or straight, and NaN0NaN0 long, with a thick suture and approximately 30 seeds 81NaN1 in size.

Origin and distribution

It is native to Maritime Southeast Asia (Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Brunei) to Northern Australia, and is cultivated in many parts of South India and Sri Lanka. It has many traditional uses.[3] It grows where there is good soil and a hot, humid climate.

Uses

Fodder

It is used to make highly nutritional fodder for ruminants like cattle, though it can be deadly to chickens.[4]

Culinary

The flowers of S. grandiflora are eaten as a vegetable in Southeast Asia and South Asia, including Java and Lombok in Indonesia, the Ilocos Region of the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand.

In the Thai language, the flowers are called ดอกแค (dok khae) and are used in the cuisine both cooked in curries, such as kaeng som and kaeng khae,[5] and raw or blanched with nam phrik.[6]

Flower nutrition

S. grandiflora flowers are 92% water, 7% carbohydrates, 1% protein, and contain no fat.[7] In a reference amount of, the flowers supply 27 calories, and are a rich source of vitamin C (88% of the Daily Value, DV) and folate (26% DV).[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Joshi, Shankar Gopal . 2000 . Medicinal Plants . Oxford & IBH Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd. . . 9788120414143 .
  2. Book: Cucio . Ardy L. . Aragones . Julie Ann A. . Katuray Production Guide . Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture, Republic of the Philippines . 9 February 2021 . 1 November 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191101044427/http://bpi.da.gov.ph/bpi/images/Production_guide/pdf/Katuray.pdf . dead .
  3. Kirtikar K. R. & B. D. Basu, Indian Medicinal Plants Vol-I, International Book Distributor & Publisher, Dehradun, Edition 2005, bks pp. 735–736
  4. . 1992. Sesbania grandiflora (L.) Poir. [Internet] Record from Proseabase. L.'t Mannetje and R.M. Jones. (Editors). Forages.: Plant Resources of South-East Asia 4: 196-198. PROSEA (Plant Resources of South-East Asia) Foundation, Bogor, Indonesia. Accessed from Internet: Feb 5, 2013
  5. Web site: Kaeng Khae Kai (Katurai Chilli Soup with Chicken). https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211219/E92bq_9fJp8 . 2021-12-19 . live. LittleBigThaiKitchen. 12 March 2012. 17 June 2019. YouTube.
  6. http://thailand.prd.go.th/ebook_bak/story.php?idmag=31&idstory=239 Thailand Illustrated Magazine
  7. Web site: Sesbania flower, raw (per 100 g) . FoodData Central, US Department of Agriculture . 14 May 2023 . 1 April 2019.