Loohan Forums

This bulletin board is associated with the website loohan.com and its blog.
Anyone can read; just hit the Index tab. Permission is required to post. No agents need apply.
Posts in the wrong category will be relocated.

New registrants: if you try to register you will get a message that we are not accepting new members. Due to the limitations of this forum software which is not designed to deal with incessant CIA harrassment, we have no alternative but to disable automatic registration, and then we can't change this automatic message. Your account needs to be created by admin before you can post in the forums. Because otherwise, almost all registrants are CIA sock puppets. To get a forum account you need to send a brief presentation email to loohanforum at gee mail dot com, also suggesting a user name. Then we can enable you manually. But before you even do that, take a look around the forum and my site and decide whether you REALLY WANT to join/post, before you jack us around. Most seemingly genuine people who apply fail to even ever log in once to change their password after we go through the work of creating a membership for them. Then we must quickly delete their account again lest the CIA has intercepted their temporary password. And of the few who do change their password, most still never post. Maybe they realize we are too weird for them, I don't know. They get real quiet, never to be heard from again.

GLOSSARY: Sometimes unusual terminology or abbreviations are used that with some luck you might find defined here.

You are not logged in.

#1 2015-01-09 10:34:54

Loohan
Administrator
Registered: 2014-10-31
Posts: 32,777

tomato leaves edible

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/dinin … html?_r=1&

Hmmm, there have been times in the heat of the summer when greens were scarce...

One can actually prune away much of the foliage on tomato plants with little or no obvious effect on production. I did this one year after reading about it; the theory goes that more energy then goes to the fruit, because the plant has more than enough leaves to feed the fruit. Also it exposes the fruits to more sunlight and makes it harder for bugs to hide. And allows moisture to evaporate more quickly, that would otherwise encourage molds.
I'm not sure if it made a difference. But i ended up with a lot of greenery to compost.

Offline

#2 2015-01-14 20:39:31

Loohan
Administrator
Registered: 2014-10-31
Posts: 32,777

Re: tomato leaves edible

http://www.ars.usda.gov/research/public … 115=242884

In a collaborative study with colleagues at Korean universities, we found that tomatine-rich green tomato extracts and pure tomatine inhibited the growth of cancer cells. These findings extend related observations on the anticarcinogenic potential and other beneficial effects of the tomato glycoalkaloid tomatine and suggest that consumers may benefit by not only eating high-lycopene red tomatoes, but also high-tomatine green tomatoes. Our results also suggest the need to create high-tomatine red tomatoes as well as tomatine-containing potatoes. Such tomatine containing potatoes are currently being developed by John Bamberg associated with the USDA/ARS Vegetable Crops Research Unit, Madison, Wisconsin.

Technical Abstract: Tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum) synthesize the glycoalkaloids dehydrotomatine and a–tomatine, possibly as a defense against bacteria, fungi, viruses, and insects. We investigated six green and three red tomato extracts for their ability to induce cell death in human cancer and normal cells using a microculture tetrazolium (MTT) assay. Compared to untreated controls, the high-tomatine green tomato extracts strongly inhibited the following human cancer cell lines:

Offline

#3 2015-04-10 10:59:57

Loohan
Administrator
Registered: 2014-10-31
Posts: 32,777

Re: tomato leaves edible

On the other hand:
http://www.westonaprice.org/health-topics/nightshades/
"While tomatine has been shown to inhibit and destroy cancer cells, it has also been shown to do the same to normal cells!"

An interesting article about nightshade dangers. I am not new to the concept: i have been reading bad stuff about nightshades on and off since '76.
Indeed i virtually never eat peppers or eggplant, and the last couple years, quit potatoes as well. I like to minimize my solanines so that i can use ashwagandha, wolfberries (goji), and choice tomatoes.

Anyway, i guess i won't be eating tomato leaves unless i am really hungry ;-)

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB