Difference between revisions of "Horse Chestnut"

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*Tell your health care providers about any herb or dietary supplement you are using, including horse chestnut. This helps to ensure safe and coordinated care
*Tell your health care providers about any herb or dietary supplement you are using, including horse chestnut. This helps to ensure safe and coordinated care
==News About Horse Chestnut==
==News About Horse Chestnut==
'''Can you eat conkers?'''
*Source:http://metro.co.uk/2016/10/18/can-you-eat-conkers-6200252/
:By Alice Johnston
Ah, autumn. Season of crunchy leaves, chilly winds and conker fights.
Conkers can look so appealing sometimes. That shiny brown carapace, their firmness, the fact that they look as if they would taste good roasted on a fire…
It means each year, around this time, people start searching for whether or not you can eat them.
Don’t do it!
Even though conkers might look appealing, there’s no sensible way you can eat one.
And yes, that applies even if you fry, boil or roast them.
A friend of mine once actually broke a microwave by cooking a conker in it – it exploded with such force that the glass was shattered.
So you’ve had fair warning.
:And there are a number of other reasons why:
Let’s get one thing out of the way first, you might be confusing conkers (also called horse chestnuts) with sweet chestnuts, which are delicious.
Conkers are not sweet chesnuts.
While they might look the same – both have green spiky shells and both are brown – they’re completely different.
Conkers are actually mildly poisonous and contain a chemical known as aescin, which can induce vomiting and even paralysis.
That said, it’s not true for all animals with deer and wild boar being a couple of exceptions to the rule.
But horses, despite the name, would still get sick if they ate them.
The presence of these chemicals also makes the seed taste very bitter – so it’s not even worth it for the taste.
It’s not as if we haven’t tried. During World War I, the government experimented during times of rationing to see whether conkers were a viable food source.
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'''Herb to Know: Horse Chestnut'''
'''Herb to Know: Horse Chestnut'''
*Source:http://www.motherearthliving.com/Plant-Profile/Herbs-to-watch-Horse-chestnut
*Source:http://www.motherearthliving.com/Plant-Profile/Herbs-to-watch-Horse-chestnut
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