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Encyclopedia > Blackcurrants
Blackcurrant

Image:blackcurrants.jpg

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Grossulariaceae
Genus: Ribes
Species: nigrum
Binomial name

Ribes nigrum L.

The blackcurrant is a temperate shrub which produces small edible berries with a high natural vitamin C content, which are very dark purple/blue in colour—almost black—hence the name. Like the other true currants (not to be confused with the kind of currant that is a dried grape), it is classified in the genus Ribes.


Blackcurrants have a slightly bitter taste; They are made into jam, ice cream, cordial and liqueur. In the UK (possibly also elsewhere), some types of confectionery include a blackcurrant flavour, but this is generally missing in North America, even in the same brand.


In North America, grape flavour in candy (including grape jelly Brit. jam) almost mirrors the use of blackcurrant in both its ubiquity there, and its rarity on the opposing side of the Atlantic.


In bars, the blackcurrant cordial is referred to simply as "black", as in "vodka and black", "snakebite and black", "Pernod and black", or "black and France creme de cassis is an alcoholic blackcurrant liqueur, used for making the popular apéritif kir. In the Netherlands, cassis is a popular, red-coloured, soft drink with a blackcurrant flavour.


When not in fruit, the aspect of the plant is very similar to the redcurrant, however there is a way to distinguish them. The leaves and stems of the blackcurrant have a strong odour reminiscent of cat's Britain, New Zealand a blackcurrant cordial under the brand name of Ribena (from the genus name) is principally marketed as a 'healthy' (if extremely sweet) drink for children.


Blackcurrant seed oil is a rich source of gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), a very rare essential fatty acid.


Blackcurrants are rare in the United States owing to the fact that in the early 1900's, currant farming was banned due to its ability to spread disease among white pines which threatened the then-booming lumber industry. Currant growing is now making a comeback in the United States, however the fruit is not well_known and so has not reached the popularity that it has seen in Europe.






  Results from FactBites:
 
Super blackcurrants with boosted vitamin C - 01 August (972 words)
Scientists are working with the company behind the fruit drink Ribena to boost the vitamin C content of flcurrants in a move that would be a major benefit to UK consumers and farmers.
Researchers have tracked the production and storage of vitamin C in flcurrant bushes and are now studying the factors that determine the levels of the nutrient in the fruit.
Blackcurrants are especially rich in vitamin C and, weight for weight, contain more than three times as much as an orange*.
Stash Tea: Stash Wild Blackcurrant Herbal Tea (280 words)
Tea Bag: hibiscus, rosehips, lemongrass, orange peel, chicory root, natural flavor of flberry, natural flavor of flcurrant, licorice powder.
At Stash tea we blend the highest quality, most flavorful botanicals with juicy fl currant flavor to produce our Wild Blackcurrant herbal tea--hibiscus from China with its purple-red color adds tartness, lemongrass from Peru, Valencia orange peel from the United States, and rosehips from Chile.
We then add pure, natural flavor extracts from fresh ripe fl currants to the blend.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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