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Quince
The Quince or Cydonia oblonga, is the sole member of the genus Cydonia and native to warm-temperate southwest Asia in the Caucasus region.
[Total Votes: 4, Hits: 57]Print
Updated On: 11/6/2009

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Family Name: Rutaceae

Botanical Name: Aegle Marmelos

Common Name: Bael, Quince, Apple Wood, Holy Fruit Tree

Part Used: Bark, Fruit Pulp and Leaves

Habitat: Found all over decidious forests in India.

Uses: It is Antiscorbutic, Carminative, Alterative and Nutritive. It is used in colisting diahorrea, dysentary, constipation and diarrhoea. It is aromatic, astringent, cooling, febrifuge and also acts as tonic for heart and brain.

Introduction

The Quince or Cydonia oblonga, is the sole member of the genus Cydonia and native to warm-temperate southwest Asia in the Caucasus region. It is a small deciduous tree, growing 5–8 m tall and 4–6 m wide, related to apples and pears, and like them has a pome fruit, which is bright golden yellow when mature, pear-shaped, 7–12 cm long and 6–9 cm broad.

The immature fruit is green with dense grey-white pubescence, most of which rubs off before maturity in late autumn when the fruit changes colour to yellow with hard, strongly-perfumed flesh. The leaves are alternately arranged, simple, 6–11 cm long, with an entire margin and densely pubescent with fine white hairs. The flowers, produced in spring after the leaves, are white or pink, 5 cm across, with five petals.

Quince is used as a food plant by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Brown-tail, Bucculatrix bechsteinella, Bucculatrix pomifoliella, Coleophora cerasivorella, Coleophora malivorella, Green Pug and Winter Moth.

Four other species previously included in the genus Cydonia are now treated in separate genera. These are the Chinese Quince Pseudocydonia sinensis, a native of China, and the three flowering quinces of eastern Asia in the genus Chaenomeles. Another unrelated fruit, the Bael, is sometimes called the "Bengal Quince".

Origins

The fruit was known to the Akkadians, who called it supurgillu; Arabic safarjal "quinces" (collective plural). The modern name originated in the 14th century as a plural of quoyn, via Old French cooin from Latin cotoneum malum / cydonium malum, ultimately from Greek, kydonion melon "Kydonian apple". The quince tree is native to Iran, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and was introduced to Croatia, Turkey, Serbia, Republic of Macedonia, Albania, Greece, Romania and Bulgaria.

Cultivation and Uses

Quince is frost hardy and requires a cold period below 7 °C to flower properly. The tree is self fertile, however yield can benefit from cross fertilization. The fruit can be left on the tree to ripen further which softens the fruit to the point where it can be eaten raw in warmer climates, but should be picked before the first frosts.

Most varieties of quince are too hard, astringent and sour to eat raw unless 'bletted' (softened by frost and subsequent decay). They are used to make jam, jelly and quince pudding, or they may be peeled, then roasted, baked or stewed. The flesh of the fruit turns red after a long cooking time. The very strong perfume means they can be added in small quantities to apple pies and jam to enhance the flavour. Adding a diced quince to apple sauce will enhance the taste of the applesauce with the chunks of relatively firm, tart quince. The term "marmalade", originally meaning a quince jam, derives from "marmelo," the Portuguese word for this fruit. The fruit, like so many others, can be used to make a type of wine.


Related Words:
Aegle Marmelos Herb, Rutaceae Family, Bael, Quince, Apple Wood, Holy Fruit Tree, Antiscorbutic, Carminative, Colisting Diahorrea, Dysentary, Constipation, Diarrhoea, Aromatic, Astringent, Cooling, Febrifuge, Pome Fruit, Food Plant, Lepidoptera Species, Bucculatrix Bechsteinella, Bucculatrix Pomifoliella, Coleophora Cerasivorella, Coleophora Malivorella, Green Pug, Chinese Quince Pseudocydonia Sinensis, Bengal Quince, Sirphal Herb
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Ginger is a tuber which is consumed whole as a delicacy, medicine, or spice.
Updated On: 11/14/2009
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Tribulus Terrestris [Vote Average: 4, Total Votes: 4, Hits: 74]
Tribulus terrestris is a flowering plant in the family Zygophyllaceae, native to warm temperate and tropical regions of the Old World in southern Europe.
Updated On: 11/13/2009
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Terminalia Arjuna [Vote Average: 3, Total Votes: 6, Hits: 77]
Terminalia arjuna is a medicinal plant of the genus Terminalia, widely used by Ayurvedic physicians for its curative properties in organic/functional heart problems including angina, hypertension and deposits in arteries.
Updated On: 11/9/2009
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Terminalia Chebula [Vote Average: 3, Total Votes: 6, Hits: 75]
Terminalia chebula is a species of Terminalia, native to southern Asia from India and Nepal east to southwestern China and south to Sri Lanka, Malaysia and Vietnam.
Updated On: 11/9/2009
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Terminalia Belerica [Vote Average: 3, Total Votes: 8, Hits: 73]
Terminalia beleriea has deep roots in Indian mythology as well as in Ayurveda. It is part of a compound rasayana preparation of three myrobalan fruits, known as Triphala.
Updated On: 11/9/2009
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Sarsaparilla [Vote Average: 3, Total Votes: 6, Hits: 76]
Indian Sarsaparilla is a species of plant that is found in South Asia. It is a slender, laticiferous, twining, sometimes prostrate or semi-erect shrub.
Updated On: 11/7/2009
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Juglans Regia is the original walnut tree of the Old World. It is native in a region stretching from the Balkans eastward to the Himalayas and southwest China.
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Syzygium Cumini [Vote Average: 3, Total Votes: 7, Hits: 92]
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Rhubarb is a group of plants that belong to the genus Rheum in the family Polygonaceae. They are herbaceous perennial plants growing from short, thick rhizomes.
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Punica Granatum [Vote Average: 3, Total Votes: 5, Hits: 59]
Steeped in history and romance and almost in a class by itself, the pomegranate, Punica granatum L., belongs to the family Punicaceae which includes only one genus and two species.
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