Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 1/2007

Open Access 01-12-2007 | Research

Does the taste matter? Taste and medicinal perceptions associated with five selected herbal drugs among three ethnic groups in West Yorkshire, Northern England

Authors: Andrea Pieroni, Bren Torry

Published in: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine | Issue 1/2007

Login to get access

Abstract

In recent years, diverse scholars have addressed the issue of the chemosensory perceptions associated with traditional medicines, nevertheless there is still a distinct lack of studies grounded in the social sciences and conducted from a cross-cultural, comparative perspective. In this urban ethnobotanical field study, 254 informants belonging to the Gujarati, Kashmiri and English ethnic groups and living in Western Yorkshire in Northern England were interviewed about the relationship between taste and medicinal perceptions of five herbal drugs, which were selected during a preliminary study. The herbal drugs included cinnamon (the dried bark of Cinnamomum verum, Lauraceae), mint (the leaves of Mentha spp., Lamiaceae), garlic (the bulbs of Allium sativum, Alliaceae), ginger (the rhizome of Zingiber officinale, Zingiberaceae), and cloves (the dried flower buds of Syzygium aromaticum, Myrtaceae).
The main cross-cultural differences in taste perceptions regarded the perception the perception of the spicy taste of ginger, garlic, and cinnamon, of the bitter taste of ginger, the sweet taste of mint, and of the sour taste of garlic.
The part of the study of how the five selected herbal drugs are perceived medicinally showed that TK (Traditional Knowledge) is widespread among Kashmiris, but not so prevalent among the Gujarati and especially the English samples. Among Kashmiris, ginger was frequently considered to be helpful for healing infections and muscular-skeletal and digestive disorders, mint was chosen for healing digestive and respiratory troubles, garlic for blood system disorders, and cinnamon was perceived to be efficacious for infectious diseases.
Among the Gujarati and Kashmiri groups there was evidence of a strong link between the bitter and spicy tastes of ginger, garlic, cloves, and cinnamon and their perceived medicinal properties, whereas there was a far less obvious link between the sweet taste of mint and cinnamon and their perceived medicinal properties, although the link did exist among some members of the Gujarati group.
Data presented in this study show how that links between taste perceptions and medicinal uses of herbal drugs may be understood as bio-cultural phenomena rooted in human physiology, but also constructed through individual experiences and culture, and that these links can therefore be quite different across diverse cultures.
Appendix
Available only for authorised users
Literature
1.
go back to reference Etkin NL, Elisabetsky E: Seeking a transdisciplinary and culturally germane science: The future of ethnopharmacology. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2005, 100: 23-26. 10.1016/j.jep.2005.05.025PubMedCrossRef Etkin NL, Elisabetsky E: Seeking a transdisciplinary and culturally germane science: The future of ethnopharmacology. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2005, 100: 23-26. 10.1016/j.jep.2005.05.025PubMedCrossRef
2.
go back to reference Pieroni A, Nebel S, Quave C, Munz H, Heinrich M: Ethnopharmacology of liakra: traditional weedy vegetables of the Arbereshe of the Vulture area in southern Italy. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2002, 81: 165-185. 10.1016/S0378-8741(02)00052-1PubMedCrossRef Pieroni A, Nebel S, Quave C, Munz H, Heinrich M: Ethnopharmacology of liakra: traditional weedy vegetables of the Arbereshe of the Vulture area in southern Italy. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2002, 81: 165-185. 10.1016/S0378-8741(02)00052-1PubMedCrossRef
3.
go back to reference Leonti M, Sticher O, Heinrich M: Medicinal plants of the Popoluca, Mexico: organoleptic properties as indigenous selection criteria. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2002, 81: 307-315. 10.1016/S0378-8741(02)00078-8PubMedCrossRef Leonti M, Sticher O, Heinrich M: Medicinal plants of the Popoluca, Mexico: organoleptic properties as indigenous selection criteria. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2002, 81: 307-315. 10.1016/S0378-8741(02)00078-8PubMedCrossRef
4.
go back to reference Johns T: With bitter herbs they shall eat it: chemical ecology and the origins of human diet and medicine. Tucson, USA , University of Arizona Press; 1990. Johns T: With bitter herbs they shall eat it: chemical ecology and the origins of human diet and medicine. Tucson, USA , University of Arizona Press; 1990.
5.
go back to reference Ankli A, Sticher O, Heinrich M: Yucatec Mayan medicinal plants vs. non-medicinal plants: selection and indigenous characterization. Human Ecology 1999, 27: 557-580. 10.1023/A:1018791927215CrossRef Ankli A, Sticher O, Heinrich M: Yucatec Mayan medicinal plants vs. non-medicinal plants: selection and indigenous characterization. Human Ecology 1999, 27: 557-580. 10.1023/A:1018791927215CrossRef
6.
go back to reference Waldstein A: Mexican migrant ethnopharmacology: Pharmacopoeia, classification of medicines and explanations of efficacy. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2006, 108: 299-310. 10.1016/j.jep.2006.07.011PubMedCrossRef Waldstein A: Mexican migrant ethnopharmacology: Pharmacopoeia, classification of medicines and explanations of efficacy. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2006, 108: 299-310. 10.1016/j.jep.2006.07.011PubMedCrossRef
7.
go back to reference Pieroni A, Muenz H, Akbulut M, Baser KH, Durmuskahya C: Traditional phytotherapy and trans-cultural pharmacy among Turkish migrants living in Cologne, Germany. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2005, 102: 69-88. 10.1016/j.jep.2005.05.018PubMedCrossRef Pieroni A, Muenz H, Akbulut M, Baser KH, Durmuskahya C: Traditional phytotherapy and trans-cultural pharmacy among Turkish migrants living in Cologne, Germany. Journal of ethnopharmacology 2005, 102: 69-88. 10.1016/j.jep.2005.05.018PubMedCrossRef
8.
go back to reference Balick MJ, Kronenberg F, Ososki AL, Reiff M, Fugh-Berman A, O’Connor B, Roble M, Lohr P, Atha D: Medicinal plants used by Latino healers for women's health conditions in New York City. Economic Botany 2000, 54: 344–357.CrossRef Balick MJ, Kronenberg F, Ososki AL, Reiff M, Fugh-Berman A, O’Connor B, Roble M, Lohr P, Atha D: Medicinal plants used by Latino healers for women's health conditions in New York City. Economic Botany 2000, 54: 344–357.CrossRef
9.
go back to reference Pieroni A, Vandebroek I: Traveling Plants and Cultures. The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Migrations. Oxford, Berghahn; 2007. Pieroni A, Vandebroek I: Traveling Plants and Cultures. The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Migrations. Oxford, Berghahn; 2007.
10.
go back to reference Johns T, Keen SL: Determinants of taste perception and classification among the Aymara of Bolivia. Ecology of Food and Nutrition 1985, 16: 253-271.CrossRef Johns T, Keen SL: Determinants of taste perception and classification among the Aymara of Bolivia. Ecology of Food and Nutrition 1985, 16: 253-271.CrossRef
11.
go back to reference Brett J, Heinrich M: Culture, perception, and the environment. Journal of Applied Botany 1998, 72: 67-69. Brett J, Heinrich M: Culture, perception, and the environment. Journal of Applied Botany 1998, 72: 67-69.
12.
go back to reference Casagrande DG: Human taste and cognition in Tzeltal Maya medicinal plant use. Journal of Ecological Anthropology 2000, 4: 57-69.CrossRef Casagrande DG: Human taste and cognition in Tzeltal Maya medicinal plant use. Journal of Ecological Anthropology 2000, 4: 57-69.CrossRef
13.
go back to reference Gollin L: Subtle and profound sensory attributes of medicinal plants among the Kenyah leppo’ ke of east Kalimantan, Borneo. Journal of Ethnobiology 2004, 24: 173–201. Gollin L: Subtle and profound sensory attributes of medicinal plants among the Kenyah leppo’ ke of east Kalimantan, Borneo. Journal of Ethnobiology 2004, 24: 173–201.
14.
go back to reference Shepard GH: A sensory ecology of illness and therapy in two Amazonian societies. American Anthropologist 2004, 106: 252-266. 10.1525/aa.2004.106.2.252CrossRef Shepard GH: A sensory ecology of illness and therapy in two Amazonian societies. American Anthropologist 2004, 106: 252-266. 10.1525/aa.2004.106.2.252CrossRef
15.
go back to reference Gordon RG: Ethnologue: Languages of the world. Dallas, USA , SIL International; 2005. Gordon RG: Ethnologue: Languages of the world. Dallas, USA , SIL International; 2005.
Metadata
Title
Does the taste matter? Taste and medicinal perceptions associated with five selected herbal drugs among three ethnic groups in West Yorkshire, Northern England
Authors
Andrea Pieroni
Bren Torry
Publication date
01-12-2007
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine / Issue 1/2007
Electronic ISSN: 1746-4269
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1746-4269-3-21

Other articles of this Issue 1/2007

Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 1/2007 Go to the issue