Search
Educational only: Remediora is a public library of traditional remedies. We are not doctors. For urgent or severe symptoms, seek professional care.
Ingredient

Dianthera pectoralis

Dianthera pectoralis is an herb in the family Acanthaceae. This water-willow is widely known as tilo in Latin America and in Cuba. In Haiti, it is called chapantye and zeb chapantyè on Dominica and Martinique. Other folk names are freshcut, chambá carpintero ("carpenter"), té criollo, curia, death-angel, masha-hari, or "piri piri". This species was described by Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin in 1760, who provided additional data in 1763. A well-marked variety, var. stenophylla, was described by Emery Clarence Leonard in 1958.

Wikipedia excerpt

Dianthera pectoralis is an herb in the family Acanthaceae. This water-willow is widely known as tilo in Latin America and in Cuba. In Haiti, it is called chapantye and zeb chapantyè on Dominica and Martinique. Other folk names are freshcut, chambá carpintero ("carpenter"), té criollo, curia, death-angel, masha-hari, or "piri piri". This species was described by Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin in 1760, who provided additional data in 1763. A well-marked variety, var. stenophylla, was described by Emery Clarence Leonard in 1958.

Source: Dianthera pectoralis by Wikipedia contributors · View on Wikipedia · CC BY-SA 4.0 · Changes: Summary extract trimmed (if needed) and converted into safe HTML paragraphs.
Recipes using Dianthera pectoralis
No linked recipes yet.