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These are the 'poppy seeds' called for in all the bread and cake recipes. Great
baked on bread or into cake.
Although the word has become taboo, 'poppy seeds' are opium poppy
seeds, the seeds of papaver somniferum. These are viable seeds that will sprout
beautiful poppies, should you care to adorn your garden, or just have chewy small
sprouts for your salad.
Then again, you may just prefer to experiment with the innumerable
cake and bread recipes that call for poppy seeds. The number of strudel, croissant,
dumpling and jam recipes that call for poppy seeds is absolutely mouthwatering.
Ground poppy seeds are a common thickening agent in Indian cooking,
used for spicy sauces. Japanese shichimi togarashi, an all-purpose spice mix,
takes advantage of poppy seeds' nutty flavor.
One main difference is between the various species of Papaver
and the Papaver Somniferum poppy. Papaver Somniferum also known as the opium poppy
for it use in making the opium drug, was originally cultivated in 3400 B.C. in
lower Mesopotamia. The Sumerians referred to it as Hul Gil, the 'joy plant.' The
Sumerians would soon pass along the plant and its euphoric opium effects and medicinal
effects to the Assyrians. The art of poppy-culling would continue from the Assyrians
to the Babylonians who in turn would pass their knowledge onto the Egyptians.
In 1300 B.C., the capital city of Thebes in Egypt, began cultivation
of the opium poppy in their famous poppy fields. The opium trade flourished during
the reign of Thutmose IV, Akhenaton and King Tutankhamen. The trade route included
the Phoenicians and Minoans who move the profitable item across the Mediterranean
Sea into Greece, Carthage, and Europe
In 850 B.C, Homer's works the Iliad and the Odyssey referred to
the use of the opium poppy in a special poppy tea.
In 460 B.C. Hippocrates "the father of medicine"( 460-357
B.C.), dismisses the magical attributes of opium but acknowledges its usefulness
as a narcotic and styptic in treating internal diseases, coughing, diseases of
women and epidemics. Hippocrates prescribed drinking the juice of the white poppy
mixed with the seed of nettle.
In 330 B.C. Alexander the Great introduces opium to the people
of Persia and India. Where the opium effects were obtained through make-shift
opium pipes and became very popular and the opium drug spread rapidly.
As technology and chemistry increased their influence in the history
of opium, over the next two thousand years poppies rose and fell in popularity.
As governments tried to control the manufacture of morphine, codeine, heroin,
and papaverine from the opium poppies, in many countries they became illegal.
Throughout much of the 1800's, opium was one of the most popular
constituents in all kinds of medicines and tonics. Many doctors considered it
to be perhaps the best natural pain reliever ever discovered.
In fact many of the USA's founding fathers used opium, including
some of the most famous ones, who according to historians, smoked it in opium
pipes and were opium addicts most of thier life. But by 1890, William Randolph
Hearst's sensational tabloids began writing stories about white women being seduced
by Chinese men and their opium, tying the drug to our growing nationalist fears
of the East. In 1905, Congress made opium possession illegal.
Opium poppies were still widely grown as an ornamental plant and
for seeds in the United States until the possession of this plant was also declared
illegal in the Opium Poppy Control Act of 1942. New generations of plants from
the self-sown seed of these original poppies can still be seen in many old ornamental
gardens.
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