Part of the plant used
The spice known as ginger is the root of a five foot tall perennial plant, used fresh, pickled in brine, crystallized or dried. Ginger is planted from root cuttings before the monsoon season and harvested about five months later. A portion of the harvested crop is saved and planted the following year (a method similar to most root crop propagation).
Origin and history
Believed to have originated in northern India or eastern Asia, ginger is one of the oldest oriental spices to reach Europe, with tales of gingerbread dating back to 2400 BC in what is now Greece. The medicinal benefits of ginger were extolled in both Europe and Asia, by Confucius (551-479 BC) in the East and by early Greek doctors in the first century AD.
Living ginger plants were easily transported in the Middle Ages, which led to wide transplanting. Ginger was well known in Germany and France by the ninth century. By the fourteenth century ginger was recorded as the second most common spice in England following pepper.
Medicinal benefits
Used extensively in folk medicine throughout the world, ginger is a whole body health improver, functioning as a circulation stimulant. It promotes bodily heat which reduces fever, aids digestion and triggers a systematic cleansing of the digestive system. This root is of great value for proactive health, as well as for those convalescing from an illness.
Notes
(I'll save this section for the book release.) (Here is where I put all the random facts about ginger.) Ok, here is one:
Ginger has been prized as an aphrodisiac for centuries. Ooh la la.