Jun 30, 2006

Guess the herb?

Update : Yes! I am so happy many of you guessed it right. That is too sweet.
It's Latin name is Coleus Amboinicus - Priya Bhaskaran gave me all the names!
Panikoorkka (പനിക്കൂര്‍ക്ക) in Malayalam - Sarah
Karpoora valli in Telugu - Vineela
Bilwa Pathrey in Kannada - Aparna and as she says it is Totally medicinal!
Cuban Oregano, Spanish Thyme - Diane
Broad Leaf Thyme - Devaragam

Very fragrant, smells like karpooram and the leaves are thick like a sponge. If you ever get one, please plant it in your yard in semi-shade. Or you can plant it in a container and keep it inside in Winter.

***
To me, maybe due to my limited English vocabulary, herbs always meant small plants which one uses for preparing quick home remedies. Herbs were something which you don’t ‘buy’ but search in your yard or your neighbor’s yard and find them, wash the dirt and use.

I come to U.S.A and everything is a herb here. I mean I never put ‘herbs’ in my curry. I didn’t understand that. Anyway by now, you would have understood I am not that intelligent :)
Also, when I read Fresh Herbs on shop isles, I wondered, Fresh Herbs? Isn’t that an Oxymoron? To me, herbs were always fresh, otherwise why use them?

I would go and search for these Fresh herbs, in small plastic packets, washed and ready to use and neatly labeled. I look at the price and I faint, $2 for 3 tiny stems? Herbs are costlier than milk? I don’t know why, but in my house we have this habit of always comparing other food stuff price with the price of milk. Anyway I never found a real ‘herb’ on those isles which will soothe the dizzy feeling I get when I see the price of it.

This entry is for Kalyn’s Weekend Herb Blogging. But before that, I want my dear friends to guess what this herb is. Clue: This is a REAL herb ;-), found so commonly in our yards back home.

flowers of the herb
leaves of the herb

For kids, the leaves are boiled with water and the water is used to bathe them when they are having fever or cold.

tulsi leaves and flower

The leaves of this herb and tulsi (Indian basil?) is boiled together to a decoction and served with honey to little kids when they are having fever and cold.

7 comments:

Inji Pennu said...

36 Comments:
At 30/6/06 11:11 AM, Kalyn said...
This looks like a great entry for WHB. I don't know what it is, although the plant looks familiar.

(Can you e-mail me so I can tell you something: kalynskitchen AT comcast DOT net)

At 30/6/06 11:24 AM, Vaishali said...
LG, I know this herb. The name is at the tip of my tongue. Oh God, I don't remember it now. I guess, I'll have to come back with the answer.
Btw, are you indianising non-Indian food bloggers? Kalyn becomes Kalyan? (Just thought you might want to change that in your post.) And hey, from paragraph 1 to paragraph 3, I agree with you on every single word.
Btw, sorry, I made a mess of my earlier comment, so I had to delete it.

At 30/6/06 11:25 AM, Vaishali said...
Is it Ajwain?

At 30/6/06 11:53 AM, Krithika said...
OMAM ?
Dont do this to me ... grrr....

At 30/6/06 12:11 PM, Vineela said...
Hi Lg,
ITS KARPOORA VALL AAKU.
iTS GOOD FOR THROAT CONJESTION.we had lot in our grand moms house.
vineela

At 30/6/06 12:11 PM, Vineela said...
Hi,
KARPOORA VALLI
vineela

At 30/6/06 12:25 PM, Priya Bhaskaran said...
LG is it Anisochilus Carnosus?

At 30/6/06 12:28 PM, Immigrant in Canada said...
panikoorkka... Even if itsn't for my ammachi's athmashanthi..please agree it is..

At 30/6/06 12:28 PM, Priya Bhaskaran said...
LG, first work in the morning is to search the names-- this is what i found through google- The plant has many names- Karpooravalli, Suganda, Patharchur, and Pashanbandha are a few of them. It’s Latin name is Plectranthus amboinicus, it is also known as Coleus aromaticus, and Coleus amboinicus. It belongs to the plant family Labiatate (Mint family)

At 30/6/06 12:43 PM, Anonymous said...
Hi LG,
where i can get this plant can you suggest me?

At 30/6/06 2:08 PM, BDSN said...
Hey this herb looks totally familiar but just cant say the name of it...

BTW..I saw the recipes for the mung dhal balls and puttu...The pictures r really good!!

At 30/6/06 2:39 PM, Ashwini said...
I thought it was ajwain...but looking at the other comments I suppose its better to keep my mouth shut :-D

At 30/6/06 2:57 PM, Aparna said...
when i saw this post 4-5 hours back there were no comments, i new the name in Kannada, and i was trying to get the right translation, but now the answer is out.. we call it in kannada, bilwa pathrey, my mom makes tambuli with this, it is very helpful for her which prevents some sort of skin allergy. Totally medicinal!!

At 30/6/06 5:07 PM, archanat said...
Is it rama thulsi, may be not, rama thulsi leaves are tender. Leaves look like that of Panikoorka's. but the flowers, i doubt. Whatever it is, i am glad that you wrote this post. I envy you for being the very ego-less person your are. Photos are very good.
Archana

At 30/6/06 5:11 PM, Revathi said...
hi
Karpooravalli ... here in US.. can u give me ur address I am going to storm your garden !!!!

At 30/6/06 6:00 PM, Nabeela said...
sage?

At 30/6/06 6:06 PM, Shankari said...
where is karpooravalli? oh I so badly want it when I have a cold

At 30/6/06 8:11 PM, Nandita said...
I didn't publish the comment, because it was the person you were talking about-and i dint want to create further misunderstanding! the mud slinging comments continue but luckily i 've turned on comment moderation-it's no good to think everyone is trustworthy!
Thanks for your advice LG
Im off to chennai for a couple of days-catch you soon :)

At 30/6/06 8:27 PM, RP said...
You know Sarah, my husband bought an apple mint plant thinking that it is panikoorka! Is panikoorka really apple mint?

Lg, to be frank, I have seen that plant, but don't remember the name. :)

At 30/6/06 9:06 PM, Diane said...
I thought it was catnip! (LOL...). At any rate, I ID'd it as something in the mint family (as catnip indeed is). I am pleased to see it is in fact in the mint family, but since this plant group has hundreds of members, that's probably no great shakes to guess that...

I wonder if it has a common English name? I'll have to look it up in my gardening books.

At 30/6/06 9:12 PM, Diane said...
Posted too soon, I guess - I looked up Priya's references and it is known in English as "Cuban Oregano," "Spanish Thyme," or "Indian Mint."

Sunset Gardening says this about it...
"Popular in Cuban cooking, they have a fragrance that falls midway between oregano and thyme but has a sweet note not present in either."

I will have to plant some in my garden!

At 30/6/06 11:56 PM, ദേവരാഗം said...
This is broadleaf thyme or spanish thyme - termed coleus amboinicus according to binomial nomenclature.(we call it "panikoorkka" in malayalam).

Ayurvedics use this herb for for a variety of medicines. This is also grandma's handy tool to open up children's clogged noses.
herbal tea made with this plant is supposed to soothe sore throats and coughs. someone told me apart from indians, south americans also use this as a spice.

The plant grows well in any tropical soil . Cut one foot tall adult stem, if possible with roots and plant it in a pot. Nurse em like catmint or ornamental coleus plants.

At 1/7/06 12:42 PM, L G said...
kalyn, thanks :)

Vaishali, oops! I changed the typo. thank you for that.

Krithika,vineela,Priya,Sarah, Gini,
RP,bdsn,ashwini, aparna,revathi, nabeela,shankari,diane - thank you all!

anonymous, I dont know where you can buy it? I got it from my neighbor who got it from India.

At 1/7/06 1:43 PM, deep said...
i hav a small doubt about foods,we always will have a fight about this among friends

meat, pulses, veggies

some are considered and hot and some are considered cold

is there is anything real in this ??

At 1/7/06 2:51 PM, shilpa said...
We too call it bilwa patre. I could not remember the name, even though I have seen this plant a thousand times. We had this plant in our garden back at my native. It was used for some medicines.

At 1/7/06 2:57 PM, Immigrant in Canada said...
phew... ashvasam ippozha vanney..ini chathalum vendilla!!

At 1/7/06 10:54 PM, Kalyn said...
Hey, you changed the title of your post. Don't do that, it changes the url and then if the search engine has already indexed your blog it can't find that post next time.

(I'm not scolding you, just helping you to learn. :) After all, I'm a teacher. Did you know that?

At 2/7/06 12:09 AM, jac said...
I missed the post though I knew it.
Why did you post it on my vacation ?

Well, there will be another chance.

At 3/7/06 11:06 AM, Revathi said...
LG,
In tamil also it is called Karpoora valli :)

At 4/7/06 5:16 AM, indosungod said...
LG, I read this in the Indian Express "Malayali bloggers come together". Looks like members of http://www.inblogs.net/boologaclub/ are having a get together in Kochi. Just thought it was interesting

At 5/7/06 8:37 AM, Paz said...
Ahhh! Very interesting!

Paz

At 5/7/06 11:57 AM, renuramanath said...
dear LG, thanks a lot for the news. my father was ecstatic, getting news of his beloved students. i never thought there were so many guys from my town out in the blogosphere ! now, i will have to be real careful while posting, no gossipping, alas !

well, now that you know of my father, know my hubby too. check this link (well, well, both of them great cooks !!!)
http://www.mattersofart.com/artistofmrajan.htm

At 5/7/06 3:11 PM, archanat said...
Hey, where r u??????

At 18/8/06 9:56 AM, Nandita said...
What the hell- i missed reading this post and went through all that hell with my plant -shows I must be more regular reading what inji pennu writes--
If you checked my GBP post, you'll what Im saying

At 21/8/06 11:43 AM, Thomas K Prakash said...
inji penne,
yours was the first blog I was lucky to visit. Your blog 'ente naalu kettum thoniyum' was such a nicely told narration that I have become an addict to blogs. But here what I want to mention is : how could you take such marvellous photographs of all varieties. bhavukangal

At 6/11/06 8:54 AM, Patricia Roshaven said...
Hello -- I love this blog so much that I featured it in my blog on November 3. Will you be making more entries? I love your photos, recipes and stories. Patricia Roshaven
Be An Artist Blog http://www.roshaven.com/blog

Akusupa said...

Hi!

The herb coleus amboinicus,Labiatae
is called Saambaar Balli or saambraani soppu/Saambraani gida in kannada and not Bilwa patre.Bilwapatre is a tree [Aegle marmelos ,Rutacea]the leaves of bilwa and its fruits are used as anoffering to Lord Shiva.It is also used in many of ayurvedic preparations.

Akusupa said...

hey! and its also called Doddapatre soppu in kannada

ScorpFromHell said...

This is called Dodda Patre in Kannada :)

We use it all the time for my son to relive him from cold & cough. We mash its leaves along with Tulsi & Paan and Kasturi pills & give him the juice.

Unknown said...

hi,
Its Anisochilus Carnosus found in Toranmal forest, India

MPS said...

Hi All,
This is 'Doddapatre' in Kannada. Very popular in Karnataka. Many households know its medicinal value and grow in their backyard. My mother use to make 'Thambuli', Chatni and Bonda using the leaves. It is very tasty. It is easy to grow this plant in hot climate. But it dies in cold climate. I am growing this plant from last 10 years in a pan shaped pvc pot in San Jose, CA. I bring the pot inside home during the months when it is very cold. (say 15th November to 15th March). I have given samples to many friends in SFO Bay area. One of our friend in Fremont is growing in his kitchen, it is climbing like a money plant!!! amazing!!. If you are in San Jose, Please drop in my house and look at my plant and I will be more than happy to show my tiny garden with very special plants.
Have a great day,
MPS
(M.P.Srinivasan)
mps25us@yahoo.com

Anonymous said...

it is Panikoorkka in malayalam.