Plants

Sunday, 30 November 2025
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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Beetroot
Beets are rich in iron, a deficiency of which can cause anemia.
Beets also help the body absorb iron better.
Pumpkin
It was a delicacy on the tables of the ancient Greeks and Romans, who served it fried in honey or grated - in a marinade of wine.
In the 15th century, thanks to Christopher Columbus, it found its way to Europe, where it was initia ...
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.
Poison ivy
Urushiol does not only adhere to the skin.
It may also stick to clothing, shoes, and anything rubbed against the plant and remain harmful to humans for many days after.
Vanilla
In the Aztec kingdom, vanilla flowers were once used to pay taxes.
Beetroot
They contain folic acid therefore they are recommended in states of fatigue, weakness, lethargy, lack of vitality, and mental strength.
They promote the production of serotonin and norepinephrine.
Cerbera odollam
Cerberus seeds contain a cardiac glycoside (digoxin-type cardenolide) called cerberin, which can cause death.
Cerberine blocks calcium ion channels in the heart muscle, causing cardiac dysfunction, usually fatal.
Garlic
Each garlic clove consists of a tubular, muscular leaf surrounding a light green bud at the base.
Fresh garlic cloves contain approximately 60-65% water, 32% carbohydrates (including inulin), and 5. ...
Brussels sprout
One cup of cooked Brussels sprouts provides 4 grams of dietary fiber.
Beetroot
It is a biennial plant.
In the first year of cultivation, it forms a rosette of leaves and a storage root and in the second year, it forms an inflorescence shoot.