Pure Essential Oil - Roselle Flower ( Hibiscus sabdariffa L. )

Pure Essential Oil - Roselle Flower ( Hibiscus sabdariffa L. )

Essential Oil - Roselle Flower ( Hibiscus sabdariffa L. ) Scientific Name(s): Hibiscus sabdariffa L. Family: Malvaceae (mallows) https://shop.bf-1.com/ List Of Pure Essential Oil https://shop.bf-1.com/index.php?main_... Best Formula Industries ( Incorporated Since : 27th Dec 2002 ) ( Company No : 002150621-D ) BF1 Office And Showroom Lot : 146, Jalan Segambut, 51200 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Location Map : https://goo.gl/maps/bxC2BvaNVAy BF1 Contact Tel : +603-6257 6048 Fax : +603-6241 0436 Operation Hours : Mon - Fri = 10am - 6.30pm Sat = 10am - 5pm Mobile : ( SMS or Whatsapp ) English : +60192618000 Bahasa Malaysia : +60123590344 中文 * 普通话 : +60173872066 Email: [email protected] Common Name(s): Hibiscus , Jamaica sorrel , karkade (Egyptian hibiscus tea), karkadi , red sorrel , red tea , rosa de Jamaica , rosella , roselle , soborodo , sour tea , Zobo drink Served cold, the tart, grape juice-like drink is most commonly called roselle juice in English. Served hot, it's hibiscus tea or Jamaica tea. In English-speaking parts of the world, the plant goes by the names hibiscus, roselle, rozelle, Florida cranberry, flor de Jamaica, Jamaica sorrel, Indian sorrel, Guinea sorrel, sorrel, red sorrel, saril, sour-sour, Queensland jelly plant, jelly okra and lemon bush. In French, it's oseille rouge or oseille de Guinée. In Spanish, it's quimbombó chino, saril, sereni, rosa de Jamaica, flor de Jamaica, agria, agrio de Guinea, quetmia ácida, viña and viñuela. In Portuguese, it's vinagreira, azeda de Guiné, cururú azédo, and quiabeiro azédo. In Surinam, it goes by the Dutch name, zuring. It's known as bissap in Senegal, krajeap in Thailand, chin baung in Myanmar, and asam paya or asam susur in Malaysia. In Sudan, Egypt and elsewhere in the Near East, it’s known as karkadé or carcadé. In Chinese, it's 玫瑰茄 or 洛神花. Roselle is Neither a Fruit nor a Flower It’s easy to mistake roselle for a juice in tropical countries because it’s commonly sold street side and in food courts alongside fresh pineapple, orange, lemon and coconut juices. In Southeast Asian convenience stories, roselle is among the single-serving bottles and juice boxes. It also turns up, as a sherbet, in expensive ice-cream shops. But hibiscus tea has been consumed as a soothing evening tea for centuries in Egypt and elsewhere in the Near East. It probably first made a splash in the prettily-packaged US tea market as an ingredient in Celestial Seasoning's Red Zinger tea back in the 1970s. Botanically speaking, it's Hibiscus sabdariffa L. (family Malvaceae) and it’s the bushy H. sabdariffa var. sabdariffa that produces the edible products.The edible parts used to make “juice” or tea (actually, an infusion) look like reddish dried-up buds. In fact, they’re not flowers but calyces. It’s the calyx, the red, fleshy covering enclosing the flower’s seed pod, which is used for flavoring, cooking and food coloring. The flower of this variety of sabdariffa is yellow, white or light pink. Roselle(Hibiscus) has been used in folk medicine as a diuretic and mild laxative, as well as in treating cancer and cardiac and nerve diseases. Although information is limited, the potential for hibiscus use in treating hypertension and cancer, as well as for its lipid-lowering and renal effects, are being investigated. Although roselle is being studied, it hasn’t yet been proven to have the healing powers of bael fruit. It is high in calcium, niacin, riboflavin, vitamin C and iron, as seen on this Purdue University page. And the beverages have no caffeine. In East Africa, "Sudan tea" is consumed as medicine to cure coughs. In Guatamala, roselle is believed to cure hangovers. In Senegal, a roselle extract is said to lower blood pressure. In India, Africa and Central America, infusions made from roselle calyces or seeds are prescribed as a diuretic, to stimulate bile production and to treat fever. Essential Oil Malaysia - BF1 Essential Oil BF1 manufacturing wide range cold press or cold process 100% pure essential oils, aroma oils, virgin carrier oils, natural carrier oils, massage oils and herbal oils according to Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) in accordance to the ASEAN Guidelines.