Common Name: | Dill |
Botanical Name: | Anethum graveolens syn. Peucedanum graveolens |
Genus: | Anethum |
Family: | Apiaceae |
Native Location: | Mediterranean Region, Europe, Spain, Portugal, Italy, SW Asia, naturalized in Mediterranean regions and parts of N America. |
Plant Facts: | Dill is an annual plant belonging to the Umbelliferae family, which also includes carrots and parsley. The hollow, ridged stems bear fine, feathery leaves that end in yellow flower umbels. Dill grows to a height of 3-4 feet and has a sweet, pungent flavor that is often used as an ingredient in pickling spices. |
Cultivation: | Well-drained, neutral to slightly acid soil in sun. Dill bolts (flowers prematurely) if overcrowded or in poor dry soil. It should not be grown near fennel because the two may hybridize, producing plants intermediate in flavor or appearance. Dill reputedly has an adverse effect on carrots, but it is beneficial to cabbage if planted nearby. The flowers attract many beneficial insects that prey on aphids. |
Propagation: | By seed sown in spring or summer, thinned to 20cm (8in) apart. For a regular supply of leaves, make successive sowings every 3-4 weeks from early spring to mid-summer. |
Harvest: | Leaves are cut in spring and summer for using fresh or dried. Seeds are gathered in summer and dried for making infusions and concentrated dill water. They are also ground into powder, and distilled for oil. |
Origin: | Dill is originally from the Mediterranean region of Europe—Spain, Portugal, and Italy—and is also now cultivated in many temperate regions of the world. |
Height: | 60-90cm (24-36in) |
Width: | 15-30cm (6-12in) |
Variations: | Bouquet Has a bushy habit, blue-green leaves and compact prolific seed heads. Widely considered the best for seed production.Dukat Is vigorous and slow to bolt, with finely flavored, blue-green leaves. Fernleaf is dwarf and well-branched, with luxuriant, dark blue-green foliage. It is slow to bolt; excellent for containers. Height: 45cm (18in) Weight: 15-30cm (6-12in) Hercules Has abundant, flavorful, long-lasting foliage. Height: 1-1.2m (3-4ft) Mammoth Is vigorous, with relatively few, rather green leaves. It quickly runs to seed, with large seed heads; considered best for pickling. Height: 60-90cm (2-3ft) Width: 15-30cm (6-12in) |
Hardiness: | Hardy |
Parts Used: | While dill leave are used fresh or dried as both a medicinal and culinary herb, the seeds ten to be favored for their stronger medicinal effect. Leaves, seeds, oil |
Properties: | A pungent, cooling, aromatic herb that calms and tones the digestive system, controls infection, and has diuretic effects. |
Components: | Dill’s leaves have volatile oil, terpinene, pinene, coumarins, dillapiole, vitamins, and myristicin. The volatile oil contains limonene, carvone, and phellandrene. The seeds contain protien, phenolic acids, coumarin, mucilage, vitamins, minerals, kaempferol, flavonoids and fats. |
Indications: | Dill is primarily used to relieve numerous digestion problems, including abdominal and intestinal cramps, belching, flatulence, nausea and hiccups. The herb also promotes lactation and is recommended for nursing mothers with infants suffering from colic and gas, since the gentle medicinal effects are passed on via the mother’s milk. Dill also stimulates the appetite, alleviates insomnia and is mildly diuretic. The herb’s antibacterial properties are used to treat urinary-tract infections, coughs, colds and flu. Chewing the seeds also improves bad breath. |
Medicinal Uses: | Internally for digestive disorders, including indigestion, colic, gas (especially as an ingredient of gripe water for babies), and hiatus hernia. |
Culinary Uses: | Both seeds and leaves are widely used in cooking, especially in Scandinavian cuisine, with eggs, fish, seafood, and potatoes. Sprigs of dill are added to pickles and vinegar; chopped dill is the main flavoring in gravlax (preserved salmon). |
Extra Tip: | Dill is very easy to grow. Sow seeds in a prepared garden bed in spring and keep the area free of weeds. Harvest the leaves throughout the growing season. Gather the seed umbels when they turn golden brown. |
Economic Uses: | Oil is used in commercial medicine, soaps, detergents, and for flavoring in the food industry. |
Methods of Administration: | - Tea:
For indigestion, cramps and gas, pour 1 cup of boiling water over 1 tsp. of seeds, 2tsp. of dried leaves or 1 tbsp. of fresh leaves. Steep 5-10 min., strain. Drink 1 cup after meals or 20 min. before bed, up to 4 times daily.
- Water Extract:
To ease a child’s colic or to promote lactation, put 1 tbsp of crushed dill seeds in *#189; cup of boiling water; steep 5-8 hr. Pour off liquid and add 1 tbsp. of honey. Give children 1 tsp. 10-15 min. before meals. Nursing mothers may use 1 tbsp. 15 min. before breastfeeding.
- Gargle:
For throat irritation and bleeding gums, pour 1 cup of boiling water over 2 tsp. of dill seeds. Steep 3 hr.; strain. Gargle with ¼ cup, 3-4 times daily.
- Bath:
For cramps, hemorrhoids and stomachaches, pour 2 qt. of boiling water over ¼ cup of dill seeds. Steep 30-45 min.; strain. Add the liquid to a warm bath, and soak 10 min. up to 3 times daily.
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Bibliography: | The Complete Guide to Natural Healing Copyright © 1999 International Masters Publishers AB™ Group 1 Card 84 Encyclopedia of Herbs by Deni Brown Copyright © 1995, 2001 Dorling Kindersley Limited. pp. 121-122 |