Garlic and Other Alliums: The Lore and the ScienceThe name "Allium" is said to come from the Greek word to avoid because of its offensive smell. The genus Allium includes more than 800 species of which only a few have been cultivated as foods. Many of the other members of this genus are popular with gardeners as easy to maintain perennials, although the smell of some members of the genus can be off-putting. The smell is a consequence of breakdown of sulfur-containing compounds which is a characteristic of this family of plants. Garlic, onions, leeks, chives and other members of the genus Allium occupy a unique position both as edible plants and herbal medicines, appreciated since the dawn of civilization. Alliums have been featured through the ages in literature, where they are both praised and reviled, as well as in architecture and the decorative arts. Garlic pills are top-selling herbal supplements while garlic-based products show considerable promise as environmentally friendly pesticides. The remarkable properties of the alliums can be understood based on the occurrence of a number of relatively simple sulfur-containing chemical compounds ingeniously packaged by nature in these plants. This unique book, with a foreword by 1990 Nobel Laureate E.J. Corey, outlines the extensive history and the fascinating past and present uses of these plants, sorting out fact from fiction based upon detailed scrutiny of historic documents as well as numerous laboratories studies. Readers will be entertained and educated as they learn about early cultivation of garlic and other alliums while being introduced to the chemistry and biochemistry. They will learn how alliums have been portrayed and used in literature, poetry, the arts and how alliums are featured in the world's oldest cookbook. Technical material is presented in a manner understandable to a general audience, particularly through the use of illustrations to simplify more difficult concepts and explain how experimental work is conducted. The book is heavily illustrated with examples of alliums in art, literature, agriculture, medicine and other areas and includes rare botanical drawings of many members of the genus Allium. Essential reading for anyone with a general interest in science, the book is written at a level accessible to experts and non-experts alike. It has sufficient additional detail and references to satisfy both those wanting to know more, as well as researchers in disciplines as diverse as archaeology, medicine, ecology, pharmacology, food and plant sciences, agriculture, and organic chemistry. |
Contents
Allium Botany and Cultivation Ancient and Modern | 1 |
Alliums in Literature the Arts | 33 |
Alliophiles Alliophobes the Evil | 54 |
The Lore and the Science | 60 |
Allium Chemistry | 100 |
Lachrymatory Factor LF and its Precursor | 107 |
Allicin | 173 |
r Eric Block 2010 | 224 |
Allelopathy | 298 |
Allium Plants | 321 |
References | 331 |
Tables | 395 |
Historical Illustrations of Alliums from | 405 |
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Common terms and phrases
1-propenyl 2-propenesulfenic acid Agric ajoene allicin alliinase alliinase enzyme Allium chemistry Allium sativum Allium species allyl methyl amino acid analysis antioxidant apoptosis bond bulbs cancer carbon Cavallito cells cepa chemical Chinese chives chives chromatography cloves CO2H concentrations crushed cysteine cysteine sulfoxides decomposition diallyl disulfide diallyl polysulfides dietary disease distilled effect of garlic enantiomers enzymatic enzyme Eric Block Figure flavonoids flavor Food Chem formation formed fresh garlic garlic and onion garlic cloves garlic extract garlic oil garlic supplements HPLC human hydrogen inhibition involving isoalliin isolated isomers juice lachrymatory factor Lawson leek levels mass spectrometer methiin molecules Nutr odor onion extracts onion LF organosulfur oxidation oxygen polysulfides precursor propiin proton quercetin reaction reactive S-oxide sample Scheme selenium selenocysteine spectrometry Stoll structure studies sulfenic acid sulfide sulfoxide sulfur sulfur atoms sulfur compounds synthesis temperature thiol thiosulfinates trisulfide ursinum Virtanen vitro volatile zwiebelanes


