» Articles » PMID: 12065148

Ethnopharmacology of Liakra: Traditional Weedy Vegetables of the Arbëreshë of the Vulture Area in Southern Italy

Overview
Date 2002 Jun 18
PMID 12065148
Citations 63
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

An ethnobiological field study on food plants and medicinal foods traditionally consumed in three Arbëresh (ethnic Albanian) communities in northern Lucania (southern Italy) document approximately 120 botanical taxa used for these purposes. Non-domesticated food vegetables (liakra), mostly gathered during the spring season, play a central role as traditional functional food. Quantitative ethnobotanical, ethnotaxonomical, ethnoecological, ethnogastronomical, and ethnopharmacological aspects related to gathering, processing, cooking and consumption of liakra are discussed. Unusual food species, such as Lycium europeaum, Centaurea calcitrapa, and a few spontaneous weedy Asteraceae and Brassicaceae species are locally used in the kitchen. Most of these are very poorly known phytochemically and phytopharmacologically. Moreover, an analysis of taste perception of the most commonly used botanical foods was conducted in the village of Ginestra. Arbëresh taste classification and indigenous criteria related to the perception of bitter taste in considering non-cultivated plants as food or medicine are discussed as well.

Citing Articles

Comparative Plastomics of Plantains (, Plantaginaceae) as a Tool for the Development of Species-Specific DNA Barcodes.

Mehmood F, Li M, Bertolli A, Prosser F, Varotto C Plants (Basel). 2024; 13(19).

PMID: 39409561 PMC: 11478842. DOI: 10.3390/plants13192691.


The taste for health: the role of taste receptors and their ligands in the complex food/health relationship.

Morini G Front Nutr. 2024; 11:1396393.

PMID: 38873558 PMC: 11169839. DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2024.1396393.


Bitter Is Better: Wild Greens Used in the Blue Zone of Ikaria, Greece.

Pieroni A, Morini G, Piochi M, Sulaiman N, Kalle R, Haq S Nutrients. 2023; 15(14).

PMID: 37513661 PMC: 10385191. DOI: 10.3390/nu15143242.


Botanical inhibitors of SARS-CoV-2 viral entry: a phylogenetic perspective.

Risener C, Woo S, Samarakoon T, Caputo M, Edwards E, Klepzig K Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):1244.

PMID: 36690683 PMC: 9868516. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-28303-x.


An ethnobotanical study on wild plants used by Tibetan people in Gyirong Valley, Tibet, China.

Guo C, Ding X, Hu H, Zhang Y, Yang H, Wang Y J Ethnobiol Ethnomed. 2022; 18(1):67.

PMID: 36401315 PMC: 9675253. DOI: 10.1186/s13002-022-00565-1.