Sunflowers: Seeds and More

When the seeds in the center are ripe just take the entire blossom inside and let dry

 Sunflowers: Sun Sentinels

His name was Bob Davis and he grew sunflowers some 15-feet high.  I dated his niece, Edie May. I remember her and the flowers with affection though it is approaching a half a century ago.

More so, he managed to get these gigantic flowers up and fruiting in the very short Maine summer, which from frost to frost, can sometimes be less than two months. In fact, I once saw it spit snow on the Fourth of July, a prime reason why I have lived in Florida since 1977.

Striped-hull seeds are for eating

Despite the fact sunflowers sometimes have a head a foot across they are not the largest native blossom in North America. That distinction goes to the much smaller American lotus. Apparently petal size is the issue, not seed bed. None the less, sunflowers look like they should be the largest flowers in North America, certainly the tallest.

One Florida summer I grew seven or so of these mammoth plants and managed to keep the gigantic heads away from the birds long enough to harvest them. I put them in my Florida room to cure. Looking in on them three weeks later they were all eaten. Squirrels, and perhaps a few other creatures. They  came in through a small dog door and dined. At least the sunflowers went to a good cause.

No-stripe hull seeds are for oil

Sunflowers have been under cultivation more than 4,000 years, starting perhaps in central Mexico and moving northward and now throughout North America. While the seeds are edible, the roots of some sunflowers other than the Jerusalem Artichoke are also edible. For information on the Jerusalem Artichoke see a separate entry on this site.

Harvest your own snack food or make oil

Sunflowers have also been part of many pre-Columbian sun religions. That the young plants will follow the sun across the sky and then return to facing east during the night was not lost on ancient cultures. The scientific name, Helianthus annuus (heel-ee-ANTH-us AN-yoo-us means annual sunflower. Russia is the largest producer of commercial sunflowers with Argentina second and the United States third. Thus you will find two kinds of wild sunflowers, those that escaped cultivation long ago, reverting back to smaller forms and some that escaped last season still big and brassy.

Hand-operated oil expellor

Sunflowers have many uses. The seeds can be roasted and eaten as a snack or, raw, ground into a meal to thicken soups and stews. Roasted hulls can be used to make a brew similar to coffee.  Dye can be extracted from hulls and petals and face paint can be made from dried petals mixed with pollen. Dried stalks can also be used to build shelters. The oil is used for food, cooking, medicine and cosmetics. You can even make your own oil with an expellor. One warning, some people have contact dermatitis with the sunflower.

Two types of sunflowers are grown in the United States, oilseed and confectionery. Oilseed sunflowers seeds are small and black with a high oil content. They are processed into oil and meal. Confectionery seeds are large black and white seeds which are roasted and for snacks and breads. But, the offering does not stop with the seeds,.

Helianthus strumosus also has an edible root

Helianthus strumosus, like its cousin the Jerusalem Artichoke, Helianthus tuberosus, has an edible root. You can tell the strumosus from the rest by a stem that is very branched. It also has a waxy layer that rubs very easily. Its leaves are lighter colored hence its common name, Pale-Leaved Woodland Sunflower. It is found throughout eastern North America. Helianthus means sunflower, annuus, annual, tuberosus, tuber growing, and strumosus a tumor or swelling, in reference that that species edible root.

Incidentally, the sunflower, H. annnuus,  is the state flower of Kansas. Also be careful where you collect your wild sunflower. They will take up toxins in the soil and were in fact used after the Chernobyl accident to clean the ground.

Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile

IDENTIFICATION: Tall, annual or perennial plants, to 12 feet or so. Rough, hairy stem, branched on top. Toothed leaves often sticky. Lower leaves opposite, ovate or heart-shaped. Upper leaves are alternate and narrower. Flower heads with bright yellow rays. Young flower heads follow the direction of the sun, turning east to west during the day turning back to east overnight. Older plants stop turning but face east.

TIME OF YEAR: Seeds and roots in the fall.

ENVIRONMENT: Prefers rich soil and good watering

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Numerous; Seeds raw or roasted, roots  raw or roasted. Seed oil has a wide variety of uses and applications.

{ 13 comments… add one }
  • Jose M. Gonzalez April 24, 2013, 12:05 am

    I must have the wrong plant.
    The “common sunflower” grows like (is) a weed in South Texas but the root is more of a TAPROOT and as hard (and tastes about the same) as wood.

    Reply
  • donna July 31, 2013, 5:32 pm

    Hey there 🙂 I love all your sites! Thankyou! I’m confused about what type of sunflower I’ve been seeing. Does the Helianthus annuus have a lot of smaller flower heads? Kind of shrub like? Is this a different species than the large headed one. And can you eat the roots of helianthus annuus? I know about jerusalem artichokes but haven’t seen any growing wild yet. Thanks for your help! 🙂

    Reply
  • donna July 31, 2013, 5:33 pm

    Also, some sites say the flower buds are edible….does that go for the smaller flowers too? Can you eat the green outside part of the flowerbud too? Thanks again! 🙂

    Reply
  • ej June 7, 2014, 1:56 pm

    i just tried to make the small wildflowers in south texas. they were good but had a very strong bitter aftertaste. i dont think i will make them again. maybe it is better with the bigger flowers.

    Reply
  • Rivyr June 19, 2014, 4:29 pm

    Deane, I read on various sites that the leaves are edible, but I could not find the exact nutrition amounts in the leaves. I may put one leaf in my green blender smoothies. Do you know what nutrition is in the leaves ?

    Reply
    • Green Deane June 20, 2014, 6:50 am

      Re Helianthus annuus… References to other than sunflower seeds are nearly non-existent. The Pima Indians used the inner pulp of the stalk as chewing gum, and the petals. The Nespelem Indians dried the roots (but no mention how they were used or even if they were consumed.) They ate the stems raw. Young seedlings are now eaten by raw foodists. The flower petals can be cooked and eaten but they are bitter. Young stems are also roasted. A yogurt-like food can be made from fermented seeds.

      Reply
  • Preston July 23, 2014, 4:25 pm

    Deane, is it worthwhile to harvest and eat wild varieties of sunflower seeds? They are so small so individually cracking them seems uneconomical. Maybe I can grind them lightly and separate the meat from shell with water? Or should I just grind them up whole, shell and meat?

    Reply
    • Green Deane July 23, 2014, 6:24 pm

      Better, put them through a hand cranked oil expeller, use the oil and use the mash to feed birds, attract deer and squirrels…

      Reply
    • Green Deane July 23, 2014, 6:25 pm

      Better, put them through a hand cranked oil expeller, use the oil for cooking ad food and use the mash to feed birds, attract deer and squirrels…

      Reply
  • dave August 5, 2014, 9:10 pm

    What are the nutritional benefits to eating mature sunflower leaves? I’ve eaten them but can’t find any info on this

    Reply
  • Suzanne Cutler August 10, 2014, 8:45 am

    Hi Deane,

    I live in Connecticut and grow Sunflowers for my daughter. My husband and I (when we can afford it) purchase sunchokes at the store as a “splurge” addition to a special occasion meal. In thought, could you tell me if I can eat the roots of the sunflowers, and if so, when is the best time to harvest them?
    ~ Thank you, Suzanne

    Reply
    • Green Deane August 10, 2014, 10:17 am

      In theory there’s nothing wrong with a sunflower root but they are usually stringy and not top palatable. Sunflowers store energy as seeds, sun chokes as roots, that why they are large.

      Reply
  • Kevin Healey April 7, 2016, 12:44 am

    Hello, Green Deane! I have encouraged a patch of wild sunflowers in my backyard and last year, out of curiosity, I cut out the inner stem pith while it was still green from one, and took a taste of it. It was huge, amazing, and void of fibers but I’ve never read of this part being used for food. What are your thoughts on this?

    Reply

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