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Khayal
06-01-2007, 01:13 AM
:arabic6:
THE POMEGRANATE


:salamext:
Pomegranates are native of Iran and they are also found in India, Afghanistan and Syria. The pomegranate is a highly delicious juicy fruit. It has been used as a medicine since ancient times. Good quality pomegranates were grown in the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and were also known in ancient Egypt. During the time of Prophet Musa (Moses), alaihis salaam, quality pomegranates were in cultivation throughout Palestine, Syria and Lebanon. The city of Rimmon was well known for its quality pomegranates. (The Arabic name for pomegranate is Rumman.) Pomegranates were introduced into Spain after the Islamic influence reached there. They eventually made their way to England in the thirteenth century. Later, the Spanish took this important fruit plant to the new world, Mexico and Florida. Its cultivation gradually spread to other countries too and now it is grown in almost every tropical and sub-tropical climate. Presently good quality pomegranate comes from Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Syria, Morocco and Spain. In India, Sholapur is famous for juicy pomegranate fruit known as Anar. In Turkey pomegranates are served during important feasts.
An average size pomegranate has 65 calories. Its juice is easily digestible and contains about 15% invert sugar. It is a rich source of sodium and a good source of riboflavin, thiamin, niacin, vitamin C, calcium and phosphorous. Pomegranates have been mentioned in the Quran and the Hadith as follows:
It is HE Who sends down rain from the skies; with it WE produce vegetation of all kinds: from some WE produce green (crops), out of which WE produce grain, heaped up (at harvest); out of the date palm and its sheaths (or spathes) (come) clusters of dates hanging low and near: and (then there are) gardens of grapes, and olives, and pomegranates, each similar (in kind) yet different (in variety): when they begin to bear fruit, feast your eyes with the fruit and the ripeness thereof. Behold! in these things there are Signs for people who believe.
(Al-An’aam - 99)
It is HE Who produceth gardens, with trellises and without, and dates, and tilth with produce of all kinds, and olives and pomegranates, similar (in kind) and different (in variety): eat of their fruit in their season, but render the dues that are proper on the day that the harvest is gathered. But waste not by excess: for ALLAH loveth not the wasters.
(Al-An’aam - 141)
In them will be Fruits, and dates, and pomegranates: Then which of the favors of your Lord will you deny?
(Ar-Rahman - 68-69)
Anas bin Malik, radiya ALLAHu anhu, narrated that the Prophet, salla ALLAHu alaihi wa sallam, said: "There is not a pomegranate which does not have a pip from one of the pomegranates of the Garden (of Jannah) in it."
Ali bin Abi Talib, radiya ALLAHu anhu, narrated that the Prophet, salla ALLAHu alaihi wa sallam, said: "Pomegranate and its rind strengthen digestion (stomach)."
Pomegranate is a good food and a medicine of great value. It is a tonic for heart patients, highly efficacious in the inflammation of the stomach and effective to check heart pain. The juice of the fruit is an excellent cooling beverage and allays thirst. It acts as a good medicine for both diarrhea and dysentery. For many ailments such as colitis, anemia, jaundice, high blood pressure, piles and arthritis, its juice is an effective medicine. When given with honey, it reduces biliousness. Pomegranate fruit is also prescribed in many disorders under the Homeopathic medicine system.
The decoction of the root bark of pomegranate, which contains an alkaloid pellatrierine and tannic acid, is a highly useful medicine for the expulsion of worms, including tapeworms. This decoction is also reported to be effective for tuberculosis.
The rind of the pomegranate fruit is greatly responsible for its good keeping quality. The fruit can be kept for up to six months. The rind also contains a high percentage of tannic acid and is sometimes used for tanning leather. Pomegranate rinds
were once used to tan the well-known Moroccan and Spanish leather.
According to Unani medicine, the ideal time to eat pomegranate is after lunch. Take out the seeds, sprinkle with a little salt and black pepper and swallow the juice after chewing the seeds. This way of eating is beneficial in chronic constipation and indigestion. It also soothes the nerves and stimulates the liver. Authorities of Unani medicine also maintain that persons doing tedious mental work should eat the fruit in the late afternoon. Another way of using the fruit advantageously is to press out the juice, add a little sugar and drink it. This produces blood, promotes good health and refreshes the brain.

Pomegranate is useful for the following ailments and conditions:

Bad Vision or Weakening Eyesight Fill fresh sweet pomegranate juice in a small bottle; leave in the sun. The juice will thicken in a few days. This is excellent for the eyes. Apply in the eyes. The more mature the juice becomes the more effective it is.

Bleeding Piles Pound about ten grams of the skin of the sour variety of the fruit. Boil in about 250 ml water. Sweeten with sugar and drink in the morning and evening.

Diarrhea The skin of the fruit is valuable in the treatment of diarrhea. About 20 grams of the skin and 3 grams of cloves or cinnamon should be boiled well in about 250 ml of water. When cool, the patient should drink 30 to 40 ml of the liquid three times a day for a few days.

Digestive and Kidney Disorders, Poor Appetite, and Diminished Sexual Power Pour about one and half liters of the juice in a bowl until the sediments settle. Separate the juice from the sediments and sieve through a clean cloth. Pour in a bottle so that it fills it to two thirds. Add 250 grams of candy sugar and ten grams of ground fennel. Leave in the sun for a week but shake it a number of times daily. Take 30 - 100 grams once a day.

Earache Mix a little honey with a teaspoon of the juice of the fruit. Warm the mixture and administer two to three drops into the affected ear. The ache should disappear.

Hoarseness or Loss of Voice Boil about 20 grams of the skin and two to three grams of alum in 250 ml water. Use the liquid for gargling.

Intestinal Worms The root-bark of the pomegranate tree is highly toxic to intestinal worms. Boil the bark of a two-inch long root in a cup of water. Half a cup of the decoction should be given three times a day at intervals of two hours to an adult. Two hours after the last dose he should be given castor oil to purge the system. The dose for children is 1/3 of the adult.

Poor Appetite and Digestive Disorders Make regular use of the pure juice of the fruit in the case of poor appetite. The juice is also good in simple colitis in which the colon is inflamed, characterised by diarrhea; and mucous colitis in which the mucous membrane of the colon is inflamed, characterised by colicky pain, and constipation or diarrhea. The juice is an excellent remedy in dysentery, inflammation and ulceration of the lower part of the colon, characterised by pain and diarrhea with bloody stools and mucus. For nausea and morning sickness characterised by excessive secretion of bile, a tablespoon of the fresh juice mixed with an equal quantity of honey, is an effective remedy.

Stomach-ache Sprinkle a little salt and pepper on the fresh seeds and eat.

Teeth and Gum Disorders Regular use of the toothpowder of the rind helps in preventing and curing tooth decay and gum disease. It cleans the teeth, leaving them sparkling white. To make the powder, dry the rind in the sun until it is brittle. Powder, mix with a little fine black pepper and store in a jar. Use everyday with a toothbrush, or apply and rub with a finger.


Source.


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Curaezipirid
06-01-2007, 01:41 AM
Salamualaykum,

Thanks for the Pomegranate yarn. I especially believe in the part of Ahadith at:

Anas bin Malik, radiya ALLAHu anhu, narrated that the Prophet, salla ALLAHu alaihi wa sallam, said: "There is not a pomegranate which does not have a pip from one of the pomegranates of the Garden (of Jannah) in it."

It refers to belief being upheld even though many stories orient to the Pomegranite as the fruit of Jehannam.

I am so supersitious that I would not even post in this thread but for Mohammed having been so precise.

What I want here to add is that Pomegranites grow well, and are common enough, in the temperate parts of Australia. There are many trees in Canberra. We had one in our front garden when I was a child, and I loved it, but the parrots usually get to the fruit before it is palatable for us.

When I travelled on the trans-siberian train (actually it was the trans-manchurian, from Moscow to Beijing through Manchuria), in 1991, the Russian dinning car had big bottles of pomegranite juice, and I was so impressed because I had only ever taken it straight from the tree as a child.

There were Mongolian people on the train showing us how to make a hole in the skin and crush the fruit to drink the juice out. I had only in childhood known to eat each small part around the seed one at a time.

Then when I began to research Persian cookery, (there is a recent post about how that began, with wanting to learn about Halva, in the cookery club thread), I found many Koresh recipes. Some used lemon juice, or another acidic fruit, (even tomatoe like a bolognaise) like tamarind, but many had a pomegranite juice liquid content.

At the time I did not know where to buy the pomegranite syrups that are available in the City I now live in, and so I waited until I saw a tree with ripe fruit.

I picked as many as I could reach. The house where the tree was had a food homogeniser and juicer, and I learned even that the seeds are very palatable if a pulp is made from. (not the pith of course)

But the best part is that I made a Koresh with Pomegranite and Peach and Kangaroo meat, that is a delicious dish. We have it with Basmati rice cooked Persian style. The reason it is a good combination is because the Pomegranite juice is smelling the same as the Roo meat blood. The two ingredients blend very well. Kangaroo meat is exceptionally lean, and tastes a little like Venison, but is leaner and stronger in iron flavour. A part of the flavour of any meat is from the hormones released by the animal if it becomes afraid, and that is what Muslims try to avoid in Halal meat. If we consume it then we also are more likely to fear with stress, rather than being accepting of fear. Kangaroo meat is unusual in that there is a lower level of that flavour, but in a wild animal. It is very filling because of the iron content. I wonder why the Pomegranite juice smells the same as Kangaroo blood?

Alaykumuassalam
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smile
06-04-2007, 05:56 PM
I LOVE Pomegranites
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Mesmerise
06-06-2007, 06:46 PM
Jazak`Allah for the post, very interesting, might try out a few of the tips :)
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