Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Laurel Trees
The message
from Kay Easton contains these words: When the berries are ripe they are perfectly edible, and are sweetish and refreshing. Apart from the size of the plants and their fruits, I can see no difference between black nightshade and 'garden huckleberries', nor taste any. IIRC there are two different plants commonly called huckleberry, and one of them is indeed black nightshade or a variety of it. I grew it once, but wasn't particularly enamoured of it. There's much nicer berries around. Both black nightshade and woody nightshade are Solanum, and isn't Solanum melongela the aubergine? Black nightshade is Solanum nigrum and woody nightshade is S. dulcamara. Aubergines are horrid, nasty, pithy, flavourless things. Black nightshade beats them by not being pithy. Tomato is Lycopersicum esculentum, but I've completely forgotten what the potato is. It's a starchy tuber you get in greengrocers' shops. HTH -- Rusty http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/tqt.htm horrid·squeak snailything zetnet·co·uk exchange d.p. with p to reply. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
60ft Laurel Trees | Gardening | |||
Eggplant Ediblity, was Laurel Trees | United Kingdom | |||
Solanum Edibility, was Laurel Trees | United Kingdom | |||
New Common Laurel Hedge Dying? | United Kingdom | |||
Mountain Laurel problem | Texas |