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Gossypol Contain in Common Mallow

03/22/2015 4:14 AM

Dear respected Botanists- I love very much to eat leaves of common mallow, I think that it can be used as a good source of hydro carbonates and proteins.

But I know that they contain Gossypol, which may cause fertility problems for males. I tried but didn't succeed to find how much gossypol is in 100 gram of leaves?

Thank you in advance.

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#1

Re: gossypol contain in common mallow

03/22/2015 6:28 AM

As long as you aren't consuming seeds and as long as the mallow you consume is not of the genera gossypia, you probably won't be consuming enough gossypol to be concerned about. Gossypol is typically found predominantly in seed oil. The plants in gossypia, like cotton, are the exception being also covered in glands that hold gossypol.

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#2

Re: gossypol contain in common mallow

03/22/2015 4:07 PM


"The common mallow is part of the large family of Malvaceae plants that include cotton, okra and hibiscus. It is an edible plant that has been used for medicinal care as well as food. The fruits are round and have cheese-like wedges which give the common mallow its nickname, cheese plant. Mallow stems are flexible and come from a central point, often lounging on the ground. This wild edible is used as herbal medicine in a variety of ways. It is an anti-inflammatory, diuretic, demulcent, emollient, laxative and an expectorant.

Distinguishing Features: Common mallow is a winter or summer annual or biennial, freely branching at the base, with a prostrate growth habit. It is a low growing weed, with a deep fleshy tap root. The seeds germinate through the summer and broken stems can also root. This plant has stems that originate from a deep tap root and are low spreading with branches that reach from a few centimetres to almost 60 centimetres long.

Flowers: The flowers are borne either singly or in clusters in the leaf axils blooming from June to late autumn. They have 5 petals and are white, pinkish or lilac flowers that measure on average, 1 to 1.5 cm across.

Leaves: Common mallow leaves are alternate, on long petioles, circular to kidney-shaped, toothed and shallowly 5-9 lobed, 2-6 cm wide. Short hairs present on upper and lower leaf surfaces, margins and petioles.

Height: This plant can grow anywhere from 10 to 60 cm in length.

Habitat: The common mallow likes to grow in lawns, gardens, roadsides, waste areas and cropland. It originated in Europe, Asia, and Northern Africa and is also in the Americas and Australia.

Edible parts: All parts of this plant are edible. The leaves can be added to a salad, the fruit can be a substitute for capers and the flowers can be tossed into a salad. When cooked, the leaves create a mucus very similar to okra and can be used as a thickener to soups and stews. The flavour of the leaves is mild. Dried leaves can be used for tea. Mallow roots release a thick mucus when boiled in water. The thick liquid that is created can be beaten to make a meringue-like substitute for egg whites. Common mallow leaves are rich in vitamins A and C as well as calcium, magnesium, potassium, iron and selenium."

http://www.ediblewildfood.com/mallow.aspx

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#3

Re: Gossypol Contain in Common Mallow

03/22/2015 11:59 PM

Judging from your picture, you appear to be around my age...why would you be concerned bout 'fertility'? (might be simpler than vasectomy)

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#5
In reply to #3

Re: Gossypol Contain in Common Mallow

03/23/2015 1:39 AM

yes you are right, but I want to serve it to my grandchildren as grandpa's delicacy!

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#6
In reply to #5

Re: Gossypol Contain in Common Mallow

03/23/2015 6:53 AM

I have lots of this growing around my place....always thought it was a 'wild geranium', as it's one of the earliest spring plants trying to invade my garden, I'm going to add it to my diet...SE posted an excellent read.

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#7
In reply to #5

Re: Gossypol Contain in Common Mallow

03/24/2015 3:08 PM

Just don't feed the fruit (where the seeds are) to the grandson(s), but let the granddaughters have any part they wish.

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#4

Re: Gossypol Contain in Common Mallow

03/23/2015 12:59 AM

No idea mate but it would make one hell of an experiment to determine empirically.

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