ბოტანიკა / Botanica
Cumin

Cumin

Cuminum cyminum

Other names: cumin, jeera, zeera

Edible plant
EuropeanAyurvedaGlobal

Photo credit: Franz Eugen Köhler / Wikimedia Commons

Safety information

Safety information

Toxicity: None known at culinary amounts; reviews report no significant toxicity at dietary intake. Essential oil is concentrated (phototoxicity/irritation possible topically) — culinary seed is safe. Possible allergy (Apiaceae cross-reactivity).

Contraindications: Apiaceae (carrot/celery/fennel) allergy — caution. Pregnancy: culinary amounts considered safe; avoid concentrated medicinal/essential-oil doses without advice. Theoretical hypoglycemic effect — caution with diabetes medication at supplemental doses.

Interactions: At supplemental/extract doses, theoretical additive effect with antidiabetic drugs (hypoglycemia) and possible effect on drug-metabolizing enzymes. Culinary amounts: no significant interactions.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Culinary amounts considered safe; avoid concentrated medicinal/essential-oil doses without advice.

Evidence level

Clinical

Supported by clinical trials in humans.

Preparations

infusion · seed

Part used: seed

Traditional use: carminative / digestive (bloating, flatulence, dyspepsia)

Proposed mechanism: cuminaldehyde + essential oil — antispasmodic; stimulates digestive/pancreatic enzymes

Evidence:Clinical
edible · seed

Part used: seed

Traditional use: culinary spice(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Edibility

Edible parts: seed (spice), culinary amounts; jeera water infusion

Toxic lookalike warning

Apiaceae family contains deadly lookalikes (Conium maculatum hemlock, Cicuta water hemlock) — never forage 'wild cumin/seed' without expert ID; use commercially identified spice only

Nutritional notes

Used in spice amounts; seeds provide iron, manganese, calcium, and essential oil (cuminaldehyde); not a major macronutrient source

Healing traditions

EuropeanAyurvedaGlobal
Sources (4)

  1. Cumin (Cuminum cyminum L.): a review of ethnopharmacology, phytochemistry (Biomedical Research and Therapy)
  2. Cumin Extract for Symptom Control in Patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome: A Case Series (2014)
  3. Potential benefits of Cuminum cyminum supplementation on metabolic syndrome components: GRADE-assessed systematic review and meta-analysis
  4. The effect of Cuminum cyminum on the return of bowel motility after abdominal surgery: a triple-blind RCT (2024)

All sources →

Not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any plant or preparation.