Description

Fenugreek seed is the ripe fruit of an annual herb. This robust herb has light green leaves, is 30-60 cm tall and produces slender, beaked pods, 10-15 cm long, each pod contains 10-20 small hard yellowish brown seeds, which are smooth and oblong, about 3mm long, each grooved across one corner, giving them a hooked appearance.

Origin and Distribution

Fenugreek is a native of South Eastern Europe and West Asia, now cultivated in India, Argentina, Egypt and Mediterranean countries (Southern France, Morocco and Lebanon). In India it is grown extensively in Rajasthan, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra and Punjab. It is a cold season crop and is fairly tolerant to frost and very low temperature. It is best suited to tracts of moderate to low rainfall and is sown in all types of soil but perform better in loam and clayey loam with proper drainage. It can also be grown on black cotton soils.

Uses

Fenugreek is used both as a food and food additive as well as in medicines. Fresh tender pods, leaves and shoots are eaten as curried vegetable. As a spice, it flavours food. Powder of dried leaves is also used for garnishing and flavouring variety of food. Fenugreek extract is used as a flavouring agent of imitation maple syrup. It is one of the principle constituent of curry powder. The seeds are used in colic flatulence, dysentery, diarrhoea, dyspepsia, chronic cough and enlargement of liver and spleen, rickets, gout and diabetes. It is also used as a carminative, tonic, and aphrodisiac. Fenugreek oil is used in the manufacture of hair tonics.

Indian Name of Spices

Hindi : Methe
Bengali : Methe
Gujarati : Methe
Kannada : Menthya
Malayalam : Ventayan, Uluva
Marathi : Methe
Oriya : Methe
Punjabi : Methe
Sanskrit : Methe
Tamil : Vendayam or Venthiyam
Telugu : Mentulu or Menthulu
Urdu : Methe

Foreign Name of Spices

Spanish : Alholva
French : Fenugrec
German : Bockshorklee
Swedish : Bockshornklee
Arabic : Hulba
Dutch : Fenegriek
Italian : Fieno Greco
Portuguese : Alforva
Russian : Pazhitnik
Japanese : Koroha
Chinese : : K'u - Tou