Plants

Saturday, 18 July 2026
21 facts about olives
21 facts about olives
"Where the olive refuses to grow, there the Mediterranean world ends"
It is not known exactly when and where the first olive tree, characteristic of the Mediterranean region, grew. Paleobotanists claim that wild olives g ...

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Jerusalem artichoke
Jerusalem artichoke was originally cultivated by the indigenous peoples of the Americas.
It came to Europe in the 16th century. It quickly became a very common vegetable in Europe and the A ...
Broad beans
Broad beans, like other legumes, have many nutritional values.
It contains a large amount of protein, which is an alternative to animal protein (100 g of cooked vegetables contain 7.6 g of protein). It is a valuable source of folic acid.
Parsley
Substances in parsley stimulate breast milk production in breastfeeding women.
Aloe vera
Studies show that it has anti-plaque properties.
Used as a mouthwash, it can improve dental health and ease gum inflammation.
Stinging nettle
There are at least 68 species of nettles around the world.
Stinging nettles don't just grow in Antarctica.
Olives
The edible part of the fruit makes up about 70-85% of its weight.
Vegetable oil accounts for 14-40% of the fruit's weight.
Garlic
The documented spectrum of action of garlic is very broad, but further research is still being conducted.
increases the secretion of gastric juice, while protecting against heartburn has a cholagogic and a ...
Garlic
The garlic inflorescence (apparent umbel) is spherical and consists of a few white or light pink flowers placed on long pedicels.
The flowers of cultivated varieties are sterile - the seeds do not set. Between the flowers, 20-30 a ...
Rice
Rice (Oryza) is a type of cereal in the Poaceae family.
This family contains about 11,000 species. The panicles are a major component of the grassland formations of meadows and pastures, but it also includes cultivated plants, including cereals.
Lemon balm
Lemon balm also contains tannins, substances that denature proteins.
They are used, for example, in tanning, where tannins are responsible for protecting animal tissues by denaturing collagen fibers.