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Facts about Mahaleb Cherry

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Mahaleb cherry Quick Facts
Name: Mahaleb cherry
Scientific Name: Prunus mahaleb
Origin Central and Southern Europe, extending to Spain, and through Gibraltar to the tip of Northwest Africa
Colors Green when young turning to red, dark purple and finally black
Shapes Small thin-fleshed cherry-like drupe 8–10 mm in diameter, dark red, more or less bitter but pleasantly tasty.
Taste Sweet, Bitter
Health benefits Beneficial for Type 2 diabetes, Heart disease, kidney and abdominal pain, cancer, shortness of breath and malaria.
Mahaleb cherry scientifically known as Prunus mahaleb L. is a deciduous shrub or small tree in the Rosaceae (Rose family). The plant is native to Central and Southern Europe, extending to Spain, and through Gibraltar to the tip of Northwest Africa, from the Balkans eastwards to Ukraine, Western and Central Asia. Some of the popular common names of the plant are Mahaleb cherry, Perfumed cherry, St. Lucie cherry, Cerezo de Santa Luca, Gandhi cherry, rock cherry, Saint lucie cherry, St Lucie’s cherry and English Cherry. Mahaleb cherry (Mahlep Tree) has been used for centuries for its fruits and its almond-tasting seeds inside the stone, especially in East Europe and the Middle East. More recently this plant has been used in horticulture as a frost-resistant rootstock for cherry plants.

Plant Description

Mahaleb cherry is a deciduous shrub or small tree that grows about 2–10 m (rarely up to 12 m) tall with a trunk up to 40 cm diameter. The plant is found growing in dry hillsides, thickets and open woods, at the margins of temperate oak forests, in bluffs, riverbanks, roadsides, stream banks, limestone bluffs and quarries, fence rows and chaparral. The plant thrives in a well-drained moisture-retentive loamy soil, growing best in a poor soil. It prefers some lime in the soil but is likely to become chlorotic if too much lime is present. The plant is deep-rooted, with a fibrous root system. The young twigs are glandular with yellowish-grey hairs, becoming later brownish and hairless. Bark is grey-brown in color with conspicuous lenticels on young stems, and shallowly fissured on old trunks. Stems lack thorns.

Leaves

Leaves are 1.5–5 cm long, 1–4 cm. wide, alternate, clustered at the end of alternately arranged twigs, ovate to cordate, pointed, have serrate edges, longitudinal venation and are glabrous and green. The petiole is 5–20 mm, and may or may not have two glands.

Flowers

Flowers are 1-1.5 cm wide, fragrant, white, on about 1 cm long pedicels, arranged in upright corymb-like raceme inflorescences of 3-12 flowers, at the tips of short, lateral, leafy shoots. The flower pollination is mainly by bees. Flowers appear in an inflorescence that typically has fewer than 10 flowers in a raceme. Flowering normally takes place from April to May. The flower is usually pollinated by bees.

Fruits

Fertile flowers are small thin-fleshed cherry-like drupe 8-10 mm in diameter, green at first turning red then dark purple to black when mature, with a very bitter flavor; flowering occurs mid spring with the fruit ripening in mid to late summer.

Health benefits of Mahaleb cherry

Listed below are few of the benefits of Mahaleb cherry

1. Type 2 diabetes

Oleic acid in mahlab can reduce blood pressure and increase fat-burning to aid weight loss, which can help to prevent diabetes. Research has shown that oleic acid has the ability to reduce symptoms of type 2 diabetes in mice.

2. Heart disease

Linoleic acid is supposed to be favorable for the treatment of multiple health conditions including heart disease.

Traditional uses and benefits of Mahaleb cherry

Culinary Uses

Recipe

Tsoureki – Greek Easter Loaf

Ingredients

Directions

  1. Knead and let dough rises twice.
  2. Divide into three portions and each portion into another three. Roll out each portion into strip.  Braid 3 strips together loosely.
  3. Cover the tsoureki till they are double in size.
  4. Beat lightly 1 egg with 1-2 tbsp. sugar and glaze the tsourekia.
  5. Bake for 20 minutes or till golden brown.

Other Facts

Precautions

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=24789#null

https://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/85891/

https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=30034

http://www.floracatalana.net/prunus-mahaleb-l

https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=PRMA

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/rjp-57

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/PRNMH

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