Reference: bleuet
These hawthorn flower buds are mainly used in infusions and have a pleasant taste.
Their benefits are numerous, particularly in helping to reduce anxiety and palpitations.
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Uses in Cooking and Beyond:
The most common way to consume hawthorn is by infusing its flowers, but it can also be prepared as a jelly.
Hawthorn flower infusion has a pleasant taste. Typically, 1 to 2 teaspoons of flowers per cup of boiling water are infused for 10 to 15 minutes and consumed 30 minutes to 1 hour before bedtime.
Hawthorn is full of valuable benefits for heart health, aids sleep, and reduces anxiety. The flowers are most often used (sometimes with the leaves) and are included in over 200 pharmaceutical products.
Who Am I?
Origin: Albania
Scientific Name: Crataegus oxyacantha
Hawthorn is a small shrub, 2 to 4 meters tall, commonly found in rural hedgerows. It easily withstands temperatures as low as -20°C. Its branches are thorny, making it suitable for defensive hedges. The white flowers appear in May and are followed by "haws" in late August, which birds love. The flowering period is brief, and the often fragrant flowers must be harvested as buds or at the very start of blooming.
The lifespan of this shrub is remarkable, with some specimens in France believed to be over 1,000 years old.
A Little History:
Its scientific name may come from the Greek kratos, meaning "strength," in reference to the wood’s hardness, historically used to make levers, handles, and tool grips.
Data sheet
Reference: bleuet
Reference: rosepetale
Reference: souci
Reference: 26545D
Reference: 20715403
Reference: mauve
Reference: 10M6810601
Reference: 021122
Reference: 12N7952502
Reference: 112930001
Reference: 050721
Reference: 29923901
Reference: safranpistil
Reference: camomilleRom
Reference: 021122
Reference: bleuet
Reference: 11N78924G1
Reference: rosepetale