Haematostaphis-Heldreichia (Sturtevant, 1919)

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Grias-Gyrophora
Sturtevant, Notes on edible plants, 1919
Haematostaphis-Heldreichia (Sturtevant, 1919)
Helianthus


Haematostaphis barteri Hook. f.

Anacardiaceae. BLOOD PLUM.

Tropical Africa. The fruit has a pleasant, subacid flavor when ripe. In size and shape it is similar to a grape.

Haemodorum sp.?

Haemodoraceae.

At Swan River, Australia, Drummond says seven or eight species furnish roots which are eaten by the natives. The roots of all the species are acrid when raw but mild and nutritious when roasted.

Halesia tetraptera Linn.

Styraceae. SILVER-BELL TREE. WILD OLIVE.

North Carolina to Texas. The ripe fruit is eaten by some people and when green is sometimes made into a pickle.

Hamamelis virginiana Linn.

Hamamelideae. WITCH-HAZEL.

Northeastern United States. The seeds are used as food, says Balfour. The kernels are oily and eatable, says Lindley. The source of such statements, writes Gray, appears to be the Medical Flora of the eccentric Rafinesque, who says the nuts are called pistachio nuts in the Southern States, but Gray has never heard of the seeds being eaten. They are about the size of a grain of barley and have a thick, bony coat.

Hancornia speciosa Gomez.

Apocynaceae. MANGABA.

Brazil. Gardner says the fruit is about the size of a large plum, streaked a little with red on, one side. The flavor is most delicious. Hartt says the fruit is very delicious.

Hedysarum mackenzii Richards.

Leguminosae. LICORICE-ROOT.

North America. Richardson says at Fort Good Hope, Mackenzie River, this plant furnishes long, flexible roots'which taste sweet like licorice and are much eaten in the spring by the natives but become woody and lose their juiciness and crispness as the season advances. This is the licorice-root of the trappers of the Northwest and is also used as a food by the Indians of Alaska.

Heldreichia kotschyi Boiss.

Cruciferae.

Cilicia. This plant has the same properties as the cresses.