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Old 05-03-2010, 01:46 PM   #1
Blaze
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Native Plants Used As Medicine in Hawaii
Beatrice H. Krauss

PIA - Polynesian arrowroot (Tacca leontopetaloides)
The Polynesians brought this plant with them to Hawaii. It has roundish white underground tubers which are full of starch. It was the tuber that the Hawaiians used for medicine.
The tubers were grated and the grated material put in water in a calabash -- the starch settled on the bottom. Each day, for several days, the clear water was poured off and fresh water was added -- this was to get rid of a bitterness in the pia starch. When all the bitterness was gone, the last water was poured off, and the starch was spread on a flat stone to dry. When it had dried as a sheet of starch, it was scraped off, and ground up into a powder in a stone mortar with a stone pestle. This dry, raw starch was used to cure diarrhea and dysentery.
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Old 05-03-2010, 01:48 PM   #2
Blaze
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Native Plants Used As Medicine in Hawaii
Beatrice H. Krauss
`AWAPUHI-KUAHIWI - Wild ginger (Zingiber zerumbet)
The Polynesians brought this plant with them when they came to Hawaii. It has large underground stems (which most people call "roots"). These underground stems are knobby, and when cut, have a nice spicy smell like `awapuhi-pake (the ginger we use in cooking). It is this "root" that the Hawaiians used for medicine.
They would take the "roots" of `awapuhi-kuahiwi, wash them, and then grind them in a stone mortar with a stone pestle. Then they would add water to the ground-up material, and finally strain the mixture through the fibers of makaloa, a Hawaiian sedge (it looks a little like a grass). The clear liquid would then be drunk to cure a stomach ache. It is interesting to know that people in other parts of the world make a medicine out of the "roots" of commercial ginger (`awapuhi-pake), and use it for stomach aches -- this is called "Jamaica ginger
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