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Amomum tomrey

Gagnep.

Tom-rey

Zingiberaceae Edible: Seeds, Spice

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Moscow State University (copyright is managed by Dr. Alexey P. Seregin)

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Description

A ginger family herb. It grows about 2 m tall. The rhizome is about 0.5-1.5 cm across. The leafy shoots are slender and grow in clumps. They are pale green to purple at the base. There are 4-26 leaves. The blade is 19-45 cm long by 6-10 cm wide. The flowering shoots are a flattened round shaped and 3 cm across. The fruiting stalk is 6-13 cm long. The fruit are round to oblong and with 3 grooves along them. They are 2 cm across. The seed are angular and 6-7 mm long by 4-5 mm wide. They are brown with a white coating.

Edible Uses

The seeds are used as a spice and flavouring for stews.

Traditional Uses

It is used as a flavouring for stews.

This uses section is brief — help expand it

Distribution

A tropical plant. It grows in lowland evergreen and deciduous forests. It occurs on limestone bedrock at about 100 m above sea level in Thailand.

Where It Grows

Asia, Cambodia, Indochina, Laos, SE Asia, Thailand, Vietnam,

Other Information

It is a cultivated plant.

Notes

There are about 150 Amomum species. They are mostly tropical.

References (1)

  • Burkill, I.H., 1966, A Dictionary of the Economic Products of the Malay Peninsula. Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Vol 1 (A-H) p 927

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