Medea Botanicals
Coriander

Coriander

Coriandrum sativum

Other names: Coriander, ქინძი (kindzi); ქინძის თესლი; ცერეცო; კამა, Coriander / cilantro, ქინძი, Coriander / Cilantro

Edible plant
GeorgianEdible & Nutrition

Photo credit: Franz Eugen Köhler, Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen

This plant carries serious safety risks. All information is for educational reference only.

Safety information

Toxicity: Culinary safe. The text itself warns that large doses can cause brain ischaemia and depression (CNS depression) — flag over-dose. | Low (culinary). | Low at culinary amounts. (Genetic variation makes cilantro taste soapy to some — not toxicity.)

Contraindications: Large doses. | None significant for food amounts; rare allergy. | None well established at food doses; rare allergy.

Interactions: None documented. | Theoretical mild hypoglycaemic/hypotensive additive at high intake. (Safety gate.) | Theoretical additive glucose/BP lowering at high intake.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Not noted (culinary).

Evidence level

Preclinical

Supported by laboratory or animal studies; not yet confirmed in humans.

Preparations

This plant carries serious safety risks. All information is for educational reference only.

edible raw (leaf) or cooked · leaf

Part used: leaf

Traditional use: culinary herb; folk carminative/digestive(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk
spice (whole/ground) · seed

Part used: seed

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

Proposed mechanism: linalool

Evidence:Folk
crushed seed in water / herb poultice · seed/herb

Part used: seed/herb

Traditional use: styptic — bloody urine and nosebleed (seed packed in nostrils); wind/colic, eye pain(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Dosage note (descriptive only): text warns large doses cause brain ischaemia and depression (CNS depression)

Reference only — not a dosage instruction

Evidence:Historical
seed powder · seed

Part used: seed

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

Dosage note (descriptive only): 3-4 g, 3-4x/day

Reference only — not a dosage instruction

Evidence:Folk
seed tincture (spirit) · seed

Part used: seed

Traditional use: low mood affecting libido(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk
seed/leaf in cooking · seed/leaf

Part used: seed/leaf

Traditional use: digestion, colic; dill-fennel group as calmative and for lactation(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk
cooked · root

Part used: root

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

Evidence:Folk

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Edibility

Edible parts: Leaf and seed, culinary. | Leaves (raw, a Georgian staple herb) and seeds (spice). | Leaf raw/cooked, seed spice, root.

Toxic lookalike warning

Umbellifer family contains deadly look-alikes (hemlock Conium, fool's parsley) when wild — but cultivated coriander is distinctive by smell. | Coriander/dill belong to the Apiaceae, a family containing deadly poisonous lookalikes (hemlock Conium, water-hemlock Cicuta, fool's parsley Aethusa) - only gather/use cultivated coriander and dill; never substitute wild umbellifers without expert ID. | Apiaceae: cilantro leaves resemble flat-leaf parsley and, more dangerously, young poison hemlock (Conium) and fool's parsley (Aethusa) — confirm the distinctive coriander/cilantro smell and absence of a purple-spotted stem before foraging any carrot-family herb.

Nutritional notes

Leaves provide vitamin K, A, C; seeds provide minerals and aromatic oils. | Leaf: vitamin K, vitamin A, vitamin C, antioxidants; seed: fibre, manganese, essential oil (linalool). Functional culinary herb/spice.

Healing traditions

GeorgianEdible & Nutrition
Sources (5)

  1. Keti 2018, "მედეადან დღემდე" (folk)
  2. MK (commentary §ქინძი)
  3. KH lexicon (Coriandrum sativum)
  4. USDA FoodData Central (coriander leaf; coriander seed)
  5. Apiaceae-misidentification literature

All sources →

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