Swamp Pea

Original White Blossomed Sesbania Grandiflora

Any plant called the Vegetable Hummingbird has to be written about.

Red Blossomed Variety

Sesbania grandiflora, has managed to work its way into warmer areas of the world from its native India or southeast Asia. If you have a frost you might be able to pot it and take it inside but it won’t survive in the yard or field. It grows best in hot, humid areas including south Florida where it’s naturalized.

It has at least five dozen common names. Among them in English are: Sesbania, August Flower, Australian Corkwood Tree, Flamingo Bill, Grandiflora, Sesban, Swamp Pea, Tiger Tongue, Scarlet Wistaria, Vegetable Hummingbird, West Indian Pea, Parrot Flower, and White Dragon.

Fruit is used like string beans

The shrub’s long narrow pods are eaten as a vegetable, similar in use to string beans. The seeds are fermented into a tempeh turi. Young leaves and shoots are eaten in salads or as a pot herb or in soups and stews. Its flowers are eaten raw in salads, boiled, fried or use in curries, stews and soups. They taste like mushrooms and are rich in iron and sugar, read sweet.

The Sesbania is a fast-growing tree with a typical adult height of between 3 and 15 feet. The leaves are regular and rounded and the flowers white and large, a cultivar is red blossomed. The tree thrives under full exposure to sunshine and is extremely frost sensitive. Pollinated by birds. A gum from tree wounds is called katurai and is red when fresh, nearly black after exposure. It’s an astringent gum, partially soluble in water and in alcohol, and is applied to fishing cord  to make it more durable.

Blossoms cooked and plated

Sesbania (ses-BAN-nee-uh)  is from the word Sesban which is derived from an Arab word for one of the species, S. sesban. Grandiflora (grand-dee-FLORL-uh) is much easier. It means large flowered. Other Sesbanias with edible parts include Sesbania coccinea, a cultivar of S. grandiflora, and the Sesbania sesban (the latter is also a forage crop for livestock.)  The roasted seeds of the Sesbania canavillesii has been used as a coffee substitute. All other parts are toxic. Sesbania grandiflora‘s seeds are toxic to fish. An water extract of the bark is toxic to cockroaches.

Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile: Sesbania Grandiflora

IDENTIFICATION:  Sesbania grandifolia: Tree to 40 feet, but usually smaller, thick, furrowed bark, and soft wood; leaves linate, six inches to a foot long, with 20 to 60 oblong leaflets one inch in length. Flowers pea-like, white, rose or maroon, 4″ long, fruit a pod half inch wide to two feet long.

TIME OF YEAR: Planted at beginning of your rainy season. Flowers and fruits second year though under good conditions can develop pods in nine months.  Grows fast enough to be an annual fodder crop.

ENVIRONMENT: Full sun, no frost, fast growing, short lived, raised from seed. Salt tolerant. Easily damaged by wind. Very susceptible to nematodes,

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Young fruit, foliage and flowers edible, mature seeds not eaten, bark medicinal. Leaf protein amount ranges from 25 to 36%, flowers 14.5%.

Nutrition Analysis

Leaves contain per 100 g, 321 calories; 36.3 g protein; 7.5 g fat; 47.1 g carbohydrate; 9.2 g fiber; 9.2 g ash; 1684 mg Ca; 258 mg P; 21 mg Na; 2,005 mg K; 25,679 mg b-carotene equivalent; 1.00 mg thiamine; 1.04 mg riboflavin; 9.17 mg niacin and 242 mg ascorbic acid. The flowers contain per 100 g; 345 calories; 14.5 g protein; 3.6 g fat; 77.3 g carbohydrate; 10.9 g fiber; 4.5 g ash; 145 mg Ca; 290 mg P; 5.4 mg Fe; 291 mg Na; 1,400 mg K; 636 mg b-carotene equivalent; 0.91 mg thiamine; 0.72 mg riboflavin; 14.54 mg niacin; and 473 mg ascorbic acid.

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