Black Currant: The Forbidden Fruit

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
  • How to harvest and process black currant. Learn the benefits of this medicinal food plant that is commonly used to improve nutrition and help with a number of ailments. The forbidden fruit, this plant was illegal to grow for 100 years until 2004. Why? Watch...
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Комментарии • 35

  • @CarolinaOmaSteph
    @CarolinaOmaSteph Год назад +3

    Sadly it is still illegal in a few states. My best friend wants to grow some but she can't because of the law on her state. She cannot order online to ship directly either. Hopefully those states will reverse the law there.
    Awesome video and information. Thank you.

  • @annmoses654
    @annmoses654 2 года назад +2

    So interesting! I always wondered about the currant ban. The unholy union of blueberry and juniper lol

  • @gardeningplus7271
    @gardeningplus7271 3 года назад +4

    I have them in my backyard and love them the red one too.

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  3 года назад +2

      Sadly this year my bush ripened right when the heat wave hit home. One day all almost ready, then after one 116F day, all became very dry raisins on the stem.

  • @boogiemcsploogie
    @boogiemcsploogie 3 года назад +3

    Been going down the currant rabbit hole, now I'm here

  • @jackhuffman9313
    @jackhuffman9313 2 года назад

    I am just now learning about this, I’ll start growing asap

  • @PerchamTalay
    @PerchamTalay 3 года назад +1

    grew up eating from our home grown all my life in Karachi lol. I love them so much.

  • @ChrisZ70
    @ChrisZ70 3 года назад +8

    I'm eating real black currants (not the ones sold in markets as "currants", which are actually a kind of raisins) as I watch this. I order them from Northwest Wild Foods.

  • @positiveandhealthy2728
    @positiveandhealthy2728 4 года назад +1

    You are such an inspiration! I love these vids, thank you! 💖

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  4 года назад

      Ah, thank you so much! I love making these video and sharing them with the world. And I especially love getting wonderful comments like yours. ❤️

  • @Diogenes-II
    @Diogenes-II 2 года назад +1

    What was that machine that had the black pepper? Why do you add black pepper -- to increase bioavailability? Some people are allergic to black pepper though. I just ordered some black currant from New Zealand. I heard that's the best.

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  2 года назад +2

      That was just an electric pepper grinder. I wouldn’t recommend one at this point. Lovely pepper grinds, but they tend to stop working after a year or two, which is just too much consumer trash for my taste.
      I added pepper for flavor, as this was to be a meat sauce.
      Black pepper does indeed help increase absorption of many vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients.

  • @randallhesse5011
    @randallhesse5011 2 года назад

    The health benefits of black currants seems to be like the benefits of Pau d'arco bark. Pau d'arco grows in the Amazon rainforest. It has a lot of good health benefits. One of which is a anti-fungal. It makes fungus not be able to grow on the trunks of the tree it comes from. So, perhaps white pine trees have to have black currants growing all around the trunks of the white pine trees to keep them from getting fungus. Maybe cause and effect were mis- rationalized.

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  2 года назад

      In this case the white pine blister rust (WPBR) is caused by the non-native aggressive fungal pathogen Cronartium ribicola introduced in 1909, which has killed millions of pines and has nearly exterminated western white pines specifically. This rust pathogens requires two botanically unrelated hosts to complete it’s life cycle. C. ribicola normally infects gooseberry and currants, however, the introduced European black currant (R. nigrum) is especially susceptible to the disease. As a result, the import, cultivation, sale and planting of black currant was outlawed under a federal quarantine and eradication ban enacted in the 1920s. Since then cultivars that resist this rust have been created, but recently they have found this fungus adapting and infecting even the anti-rust cultivars.
      Nature is complex and not always convenient for the needs of humans. Plants get sick too, and these have helped harbor very bad fungus that kill forests.
      ag.umass.edu/landscape/fact-sheets/white-pine-blister-rust-ribes-species

  • @jenniferrush8231
    @jenniferrush8231 3 года назад +2

    If you put it in the ground Inthink your yield would be easily 10x for the size of bush you have. My clusters are easily 50+ berries on a 4 year old bush. 2 yrs in ground.

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  3 года назад

      That makes sense. I haven’t figured out where it’s forever home is yet. Need to shift some shrubbery around…

  • @estrellaestrella4660
    @estrellaestrella4660 2 года назад

    is it safe to eat black currant seed oil for ever, I have "Hydro eye" plan base ....for dry eyes. Can you help me to find out if this is safe to eat for ever?
    Thank you so much for your time.

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  2 года назад

      I don’t think that long term safety studies of black currant seed oil have been done. It is generally considered safe when used in culinary or normal medicinal amounts. There are few reports of adverse events at normal doses. Some people may get GI upset. If you have problems with blood clotting and are taking blood thinners, or if you bruise or bleed easily, high prolonged doses could increase bleeding via blood thinning potential.
      Black currants are a safe food. Serious side effects are not currently expected from reasonable doses.

  • @maragrace820
    @maragrace820 Год назад

    Where can I get seeds of the wild variety?

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  Год назад

      I don’t have a specific source for wild black currant seeds. I purchased mine as a potted plant at a local nursery. I see that there are vendors on Amazon selling these, but I can’t personally vouch for them.

  • @TheCountrybubba
    @TheCountrybubba 4 года назад +2

    I don't think currant are grown here in Kansas, I only see them in the fruits section in supermarket. I think the weather made it impossible

    • @1Mhoram9
      @1Mhoram9 3 года назад

      I have them, two plants growing about five feet tall here in my yard outside of Wichita and we also have a large pine tree in our yard.

    • @TheCountrybubba
      @TheCountrybubba 3 года назад +1

      @@1Mhoram9 wow I honestly did not know that. I guess I never tried, I live in Kansas City. Great job my friend!!!

  • @MuhammadFadil-ph7uz
    @MuhammadFadil-ph7uz 3 года назад +1

    can we eat it directly?

    • @teaartist6455
      @teaartist6455 3 года назад +1

      Yup, you can, though black currants specifically do tend to be quite sour at first but become much sweeter than the red ones so you may want to taste-test them as they take a bit of time after turning black to actually become ripe. All of them can be eaten unprepared, though, they're not exactly prohibitively sour.

    • @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590
      @dr.mindya.curryndpassionfo7590  3 года назад +1

      Yes. They have a very distinctive flavor…

  • @loldada7987
    @loldada7987 3 года назад +2

    Hi

  • @racheal74
    @racheal74 2 года назад

    I made a Blackcurrant and honey sirop with mine.