Cumin
€ 3,27
Digestive carminative. Relieves gas, bloating, and supports nutrient absorption.
10 in stock (can be backordered)
Cumin
Cuminum cyminum
Botanical Family: Apiaceae (Carrot family)
Digestive spice: Warming carminative for gas and bloating
Global flavor: Essential in cuisines worldwide
Ancient medicine: Used since Egyptian times
Botanical Description
Cuminum cyminum is a slender annual growing 30-50cm tall. The finely divided, thread-like leaves resemble fennel or dill. Small white or pink flowers in umbels produce the familiar elongated seeds (technically fruits) with a distinctive warm, earthy aroma.
Medicinal Actions
Primary actions: Carminative, antispasmodic, digestive stimulant, galactagogue, antimicrobial.
Traditional uses: One of the oldest cultivated spices, used in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Primarily valued for digestive support – easing gas, bloating, and indigestion. Also traditionally used to promote milk production and as a general warming tonic.
Ayurvedic use: In Ayurveda, cumin is considered tridoshic (balancing to all constitutions) and is often roasted before use to enhance its digestive properties.
Body Systems Affected
Digestive: Primary affinity – relieves gas, bloating, and indigestion. Warming and stimulating.
Reproductive: Traditional galactagogue.
Metabolic: Research suggests blood sugar and cholesterol-modulating effects.
Safety Information
Very safe in culinary amounts. One of the safest medicinal spices.
Pregnancy: Safe in food amounts; moderate medicinal doses traditionally used.
Surgery: May affect blood sugar; discontinue 2 weeks before surgery.
Growing Guide
Hardiness: Annual. Needs long, hot growing season.
Light: Full sun.
Soil: Well-drained, fertile soil.
Sowing: Direct sow after last frost when soil is warm.
Spacing: 10-15cm apart.
Challenge: Requires 3-4 months of warm weather. May be difficult in cool, short-season climates.
Harvesting
Part used: Seeds (fruits).
When to harvest: When seeds are brown and dry but before they shatter.
Drying & Storage
Dry seeds completely. Store whole in airtight containers for up to 2 years. Toast before grinding for best flavor. Ground cumin loses potency quickly.
📚 HerbWoman Resources
Find preparation methods, formulation ideas, and educational materials for Cumin in the HerbWoman Recipe Database and course materials.
Seed Details
Botanical Name: Cuminum cyminum |
Brand: HerbWoman
| Weight | 0,01 g |
|---|

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