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Loquat nut any good?

Posted by DunedinDan z9b FL (Tampa) (My Page) on
Wed, Feb 23, 05 at 14:26

Hi - I just tried some of the loquat fruit (sometimes called japenese plum) from a tree in my new yard. Pretty good! I was wondering if anyone has ever tried eating the nut inside?


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: Loquat nut any good?

Whoa - I just found a web site that says this:

Warning!
Do not eat, chew, or swallow the seeds.
The loquat seed is highly toxic.
Remove the fleshly fruit from the seed
before eating or cooking.

So don't anyone try it! Thanks, -Dan

Here is a link that might be useful: loquat recipe - with warning


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

Dan, that makes sense. Most of the stone fruit (peaches, apricots, plums) are in the rose family and loquats (at least 2 different species I know of) are members. Their pits contain dangerous levels of cyanide compounds. Our native holly-leaf cherry was used by the native Chumash people as a source of food and they knew that they had to leach out the poisons from the pits by repeated soakings and boilings before they made a mush out of them.


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

I take the loquat seeds and soak them in vodka for three or four months making a nice cherry flavored liquor. I found the recipe on the net a few years ago. I know for a fact that one can drink a couple of ounces of this after dinner and experience only expected effects. I would not drink the entire bottle, however. I have also heard of folks who roast the seeds and eat them. That's sounds a bit much to me.


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

Wow, I thought I was the only one to find out that the seeds, when used properly, give a great "cherry" flavor. I discovered it when I tossed a few whole loquats inside a chicken before roasting it. Afterwards, they tasted so cherry-like that I could't believe the change. Then I researched this and found that years ago people would cook them, dye them red, and make "cherry" pies with them. You would be fooled. Paul. P.S. I'm not dead from eating them.


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

Actually, whether or not the nut is poisonous seems up for debate. Today I found a recipe for Italian loquat nut liquour (made by soaking them in grain alcohol) and also a recipe for making wine from the fruit! I even found a reference to eating the nut to treat cancer. I am sticking to the fruit, for now. Made a nice batch of jam and used some to make a ginger citrus glaze for some pork chops. Yum!


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

This is the "plum wine" regularly served in oriental restaurants. Good, no? Paul.


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

I found this online...

More articles at Planetherbs.com

Loquat Leaf, fruit and seed

Dr. Michael Tierra L.Ac., O.M.D.

Biological Name: Rosaceae Eriobotryae japonicae

Other Names: Loquat leaf, pi pa ye

Is a subtropical tree belonging to the rosaceae family . The fruit, kernel and tender leaves are all used for medicinal purpose.

Nature and flavor : sweet sour and moderate.

Constituents: Its flesh contains malic acid, tartaric acid, citric acid, tannate, carotene, vitamins A, B and C. It leaves and kernel contain amygdalin (amygdalin is otherwise known as the anti-cancer vitamin, B17 or laetrile). .

Properties: Antitussive, expectorant, antiemetic

Action: Beneficial to the vital energy of the lungs. It dissolves and expectorates phlegm and alleviates cough. Relieving coughing and vomiting. The flesh promotes the secretion of body fluids and eliminates thirst. The tender leaves are used for various types of coughs but the under side is usually prepared by rubbing the hairs off so they do not irritate the throat.

Indications: Coughing due to evil heat in the lungs. Chronic and acute bronchitis. Thirst due to evil summer heat can treated with loquat leaves, drunk as a substitute for tea.

Dosage: 6-15 grams

Safety: Loquat leaf should not be used for cough caused by cold.

Recently in Europe, I had a conversation with some people who had stayed on the island of Cyprus in the Mediterranean. They mentioned how herbalists there were prescribing loquat leaf tea with some success to patients with various types of cancer. I knew that loquat had the hydrocyanic glycosides in common with apricot and peach seeds as well as wild cherry tree bark. These hydrocyanic glycosides are also known as amygdalin better known from the work of Dr. Krebs as laetrile and that laetrile is still respected by many people as both a cancer preventive and cure for some cancers.

In treating one of my patients for a rare form of blood vessel cancer (by the way, he seems to be doing very well so far), a Japanese neighbor of his recommended that he drink loquat leaf tea (just as herbalists on Cyprus were recommending) and that he eat 2 loquat seeds daily because these are some 1300 times higher in amygdalin than the leaves. She told him of a man with bone marrow cancer who cured himself of bone marrow cancer by eating a loquat seed every morning and evening. She said the cancer disappeared after one month. He then drank loquat seed wine a half ounce daily while eating a macrobiotic diet. He also applied the shiny side of the loquat leaf over the tumor site and did moxabustion over this area daily. The woman spoke of other cancers including liver and pancreatic cancer that were cured following the same regime.

Sine these are incurable cancers, I think it is reasonable that one follow this loquat leaf and seed treatment and macrobiotic for otherwise incurable cancers.

Evidently loquat leaf is a very popular folk treatment not only for cancer but many other diseases in Japan. In fact, she showed me a small book in Japanese called "Natural Remedy" by Yuriko Tojo (1988) that describes various ways to use the loquat both internally and externally for moxa. I think it is highly significant that with Dr. Krebs and the laetrile controversy in the US, the use of loquat leaf on the island of Cyprus for cancer and then its use in Japan not only internally but externally with moxabustion, that there must be something to this remedy. In any case, I happen to be one of those who really enjoy eating loquats and I think the tree which seems to grow in diverse climate zones is very beautiful. It wouldn't hurt for anyone to have their own home loquat tree.


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

The seeds contain cyanide.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=12398304&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_docsum

Keith


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RE: Loquat nut any good?

Hmmm interesting... I had never heard of cyanide in the seeds before. I wonder how much is there and if the seeds need to actually be chewed. My son a few years ago was eating a loquat and accidentally swallowed a seed. He was small then. It passed right through, no problems thank heavens.


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