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Home::Home & Garden

A Tea-Lover's Soul Weed

Author : Jenny Harker
We gardeners spend hours yanking weeds out of our precious
flowerbeds. To be honest, I enjoy weeding. I find it relaxing.
I suspect quite a few of my fellow gardeners would agree.

Recently I discovered an annoying weed I haven't been able
to defeat is in truth a sheer delight. I speak of the humble
Pineapple Weed.

Matricaria matricioides! A big name for a weed found in waste
areas. But its scientific name is actually touching once
defined.

'Matricaria' stems from the Latin matrix meaning 'mother'
while 'caria' is Latin for 'dear'. This gives us 'mother dear'.

This name refers to the medicinal use of pineapple weed for
easing the pain of the menstrual cycle, as well as for treating
colic in babies.

Pineapple weed can soothe the pain of being a woman, a mother, or
a baby (which helps Mom even more).

This plant's green fern-like foliage and oval greenish yellow
flowers often cause people to mistake it for its close relative
the chamomile plant. Pineapple weed looks like chamomile while
in bud, only this weed's homely flowers never produce the flashy
white petals of its famous cousin.

Visit this link to see a photo:
http://www.wssa.net/photo&info/bmp/pineapple.weed.plant.jpg

This native annual of Western America makes its stubborn presence
known from May to November. It grows in cracks in sidewalks,
parking lots, in any plot of dry earth trampled by we humans. The
pineapple weed has spread clear across the Atlantic to Europe.

I discovered the hidden charm of this weed while pulling a group
out of the ground. The crushed leaves actually give off the
fruity scent of pineapple.

Intrigued, I did some research. I learned this weed is not only
edible, with the same soothing qualities as chamomile, but was
also a big hit with the Native Americans way back when.

Native Americans traded goods for pineapple weed. The plant was
used as a perfume as well as a big repellant. Dried plants were
sprinkled onto meat to keep off flies.

But what caught my attention while researching is the fact this
weed is often brewed as a tea.

Being a devout tea-drinker this delighted me. I already make tea
from my peppermint plants. Why not put this pesky weed to good
use?

After rinsing three dusty plants in the sink I brewed a pot of
pineapple weed tea by pouring freshly boiled water into a tea
strainer holding flower heads from the plants (the leaves can
also be used but they add a bitter note to the brew). I allowed
the tea to steep for three minutes before removing the strainer
from the pot.

The result was nothing short of wonderful! The delicately
fragrant tea tasted like gentle chamomile with honey. A young
friend described the tea as tasting like a 'yummy dessert in a
cup'.

I no longer buy chamomile tea at the grocery store. Instead
I harvest my pineapple weed from a proper garden bed. I allow a
few flower heads to develop into seed heads, which I collect for
future planting.

(Sidebar: Why did I buy chamomile tea instead of grow the herb?
I'm asking myself this question. Think of the money I could have
saved! Oh, my lord. I'm an idiot.)

With good care the pineapple weed becomes a handsome soul a
foot tall with attractive ferny foliage. Collect the brown seed
heads from wild plants if you wish to grow it. Grow it as you
would chamomile.

Pineapple weed can also be used as an accent plant with other
more traditional garden plants. The chartreuse color of the
flower heads glow when mixed in with blue-flowering plants.

But be careful! We are talking about a weed, and we all know
how easily weeds spread. Collect the seed heads before they
turn completely brown, or you'll wind up drowning in tea.

Visitors to my garden often point out my pineapple weed bed
and tell me I need to weed. I inform them I grow the weeds
on purpose. My visitors look at me as if I'm crazy. Weeds are
pests! Has she finally lost her mind?

I explain my reason (it happens so often that explaining is
growing tiresome). My visitors wind up sniffing the plants and
peppering me with questions.

So, the next time you're on your knees in your garden about to
yank out another weed stop yourself and take a good look at
the plant.

You may have found a Cinderella in disguise.

Disclaimer: The results I achieved with this plant are solely my
own. I am not responsible for any adverse effects you may
experience as a result of consuming the Pineapple Weed. Please do
not consume any wild plant until you are sure of its
identification and any dangers it may pose. If you suffer from
plant allergies then please check with your doctor first.

About the Author

Jenny Harker is an experienced gardener, psychic, and writer. Visit: http://www.livejournal.com/~paragarden/

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