Handbook of Herbs and Spices - Volume 3

(sharon) #1

226 Handbook of herbs and spices


is then scraped, making an area up to 6.5 cm^2. When scraping is complete, the
taproot is shaded using a construction of twigs and stones.


  1. Two to three days after scraping, the first flow of sap is collected from the top of


the taproot. After this, a slightly deeper cut is made, about 0.5 cm from the top
and sap is collected again. A third cut may be made to induce further flow of sap.
The process of cutting and collecting sap is continued for 10 to 15 cycles until
the flow of sap stops.


  1. After each cutting, the taproot is covered with twigs and stones to prevent soil or


gravel falling onto the cut surface, and to maintain cool conditions under which
the taproot can mature.


  1. The sap is stored in pits dug in the soil. The pit size may vary but it is typically


1.8 m long, 1.8m wide and 2.4 m deep. The sides of the pit are plastered with
mud and the top covered with stalks of male asafetida plants, leaving an opening
of about 0.3 m diameter, through which the daily collection of sap can be poured
into the pit.

The asafetida collected in the pit is generally very thick and sticky, and can be


moulded into any shape by hand. It continues to mature during storage in the


pit (Pruthi 2001), and it is this resin made into tears or mass that is marketed as


asafetida. It varies in colour from white to greyish or reddish. White asafetida is


packed first in cloth bags and then in jute bags. Dark red asafetida is generally packed


in goat- or sheep-skin, where it matures further. It has a powerful foul odour, and


bitter and acrid taste due to sulphur compounds, and is called ‘Devil’s Dung’.


Interestingly it is also known as ‘Food of the Gods’. All parts of F. foetida have the


strong asafetida smell.


Some Pathans in Afghanistan collect the resin from wild plants by cutting the


above-ground stems. They also chop and boil roots and stems in water and collect the


resin by evaporating the water, but the quality of such resin is inferior. The average


yield of oleogum is roughly 40 g per plant, but certain plants may yield as much as


900 g (Krishnamurthy 1994).


Galbanum is a gum resin exuded from the lower stems of another species, F.


galbaniflua Boiss and Buinse, a stout perennial herb of North Western Asia. The gum


occurs in the form of distinct irregular tears or masses, is yellow to brown in colour


and has a powerful and tenacious aroma.


Sagapenum is similar to asafetida, but occurs as the hardened exudation of another


species, F. persica Wild or F. snowilziana D.C. It is exported to India from Saudi


Arabia and Iran and marketed largely in Mumbai as broken fragments.


Sambal is the oleoresin gum of F. sumbal. It is produced in Iran and the main


market is again India.


12.5 Processing.......................................................................................


The main processed products from asafetida are oil of asafetida and compounded


asafetida. The oil does not have much commercial value. The flavouring and


pharmaceutical industries use mainly alcoholic tinctures of the gum resin (Anon.


1991). Oil of asafetida is extracted by steam distillation of the gum resin and yield


varies from 3.3 to 3.7%. The chief component of the oil is secondary butylpropenyl

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