Hemp: Difference between revisions

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(Added some pre-1600 information about hemp.)
(Fixing up exciting mistakes with the 'further information.' Maybe.)
 
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== Further Information ==
== Further Information ==
[http://www.gallowglass.org/jadwiga/SCA/hempnettle.html|Hemp and Nettle]: Two Food/Fiber/Medical plants in use in Eastern Europe.
Hemp and Nettle: Two Food/Fiber/Medical plants in use in Eastern Europe. [http://www.gallowglass.org/jadwiga/SCA/hempnettle.html]

[http://books.google.com.au/books?id=DKw8AAAAIAAJ|Bread and salt]: a social and economic history of food and drink in Russia. GoogleBooks Preview
Bread and salt: a social and economic history of food and drink in Russia. GoogleBooks Preview [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=DKw8AAAAIAAJ
[http://books.google.com.au/books?id=9Efw2S_NekYC|The Art of Cooking] by Maestro Martino of Como. GoogleBooks Preview

The Art of Cooking by Maestro Martino of Como. GoogleBooks Preview [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=9Efw2S_NekYC]





Latest revision as of 21:55, 21 August 2009

The Hemp plant (Cannabis sativa L.) can be used for a number of useful things such as, fibre production, cooking oil, and food source.

In modern usage, although referring to members of the Cannabis family, there is a distinction between hemp cultivated for psychoactive substances (marijuana) and those cultivated for fibre and seed production (industrial hemp). Its relationship to marijuana has however meant that its growth in most first world countries is outlawed (or very tightly controlled).

Hemp as Fibre

Hemp fabric is woven from the bast fibres of the plant (the inner bark of phloem of the stem) that is seperated from the woody core (xylem) of the stem through a process called retting. The retted fibres are then spun and woven into fabrics or used in other items such as cordage. It is generally considered difficult to tell bast-fibres (including hemp, linen and nettle) apart by eye, or even under a microscope, so it is difficult to find archaeological items that have been positively identified as hemp.

As with other bast-fibre fabrics, hempcloth is stain resistant because dirt cannot penetrate far into the fibres, but simultaneously this property makes intentional staining, such as dyeing difficult.

Hemp as Food

Mention of hempseed pottage is in the 15th century cookbook of Martino of Como, and hempseed oil was used in Russia as an alternative to animal fats on fast days (see Bread and Salt p.5).


Further Information

Hemp and Nettle: Two Food/Fiber/Medical plants in use in Eastern Europe. [1]

Bread and salt: a social and economic history of food and drink in Russia. GoogleBooks Preview [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=DKw8AAAAIAAJ

The Art of Cooking by Maestro Martino of Como. GoogleBooks Preview [2]