Medea Botanicals
Wild/sheep sorrel & docks

Wild/sheep sorrel & docks

Rumex acetosa(?)

Other names: Wild/sheep sorrel & docks, Common sorrel

Edible plant
GeorgianEdible & Nutrition

Photo credit: Didier Descouens

Safety information

Safety information

Toxicity: Leaves contain oxalic acid/soluble oxalates; large quantities harmful (GI irritation; risk to kidney-stone-prone people; rare severe oxalate poisoning from very large raw intake). Generally safe in normal culinary amounts. Dock roots contain anthraquinones (laxative) — not for casual high-dose use. | High soluble oxalic acid/oxalates — pleasant sour taste comes from oxalate; eat in moderation, cooking reduces it. Excessive intake risks oxalate nephrotoxicity.

Contraindications: Kidney stones (oxalate), gout, renal impairment, rheumatoid conditions — limit intake; children should not eat large raw amounts; avoid in pregnancy for medicinal root (laxative anthraquinones). | Kidney stones (oxalate), renal impairment, gout; caution in children with large servings.

Interactions: Oxalate binds minerals (calcium, iron, magnesium) reducing absorption; high leaf intake (vitamin K) may affect warfarin; root anthraquinones may add to other laxatives and cause potassium loss relevant to digoxin/diuretics. | Oxalate may impair absorption of calcium/iron from the same meal.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Avoid medicinal root (laxative anthraquinones).

Evidence level

Preclinical

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

Preparations

edible-raw · sour leaf

Part used: sour leaf

Traditional use: fresh tangy spring green(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk
cooked · leaf

Part used: leaf

Traditional use: sour green soups, fillings(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Evidence:Folk
folk medicinal · leaf/root

Part used: leaf/root

Traditional use: dock leaves for skin; root mild laxative

Proposed mechanism: root anthraquinones laxative

Evidence:Preclinical
cooked · leaf

Part used: leaf

Traditional use: soups (green sorrel soup/borscht); purée(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Proposed mechanism: cooking reduces oxalate

Evidence:Folk
edible-raw · young leaf

Part used: young leaf

Traditional use: small amounts, salad(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Dosage note (descriptive only): sparingly

Evidence:Folk

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Edibility

Edible parts: young leaves raw (sparingly) or cooked | Young leaves raw (sparingly) or cooked.

Toxic lookalike warning

Arrow/spear-shaped sorrel leaves can resemble young leaves of lords-and-ladies (Arum, toxic) and other plants when small; confirm the sour taste of a known Rumex and the characteristic leaf shape; avoid unknown arrow-leaved plants. | Sorrel's arrow-shaped (hastate/sagittate) leaves confused with young lords-and-ladies (Arum maculatum) — arum contains needle-like calcium-oxalate raphides, toxic raw, leaves similar in shape; arum leaves glossy with netted veins and often dark-spotted, sorrel leaves matte with sour taste and basal lobes pointing backward. Taste-testing for identification is unsafe with arum present.

Nutritional notes

Vitamin C, some vitamin A and minerals; tangy low-calorie green (oxalate caveat means it should not be the dominant green in a diet). | High vitamin C, vitamin A, some magnesium/potassium; oxalate-limited.

Healing traditions

GeorgianEdible & Nutrition
Sources (4)

  1. Bussmann et al., A comparative ethnobotany ... Republic of Georgia, J Ethnobiol Ethnomed 2016;12:43
  2. Bussmann et al., Unity in diversity — food plants of Sakartvelo, 2021
  3. USDA FoodData Central (sorrel/dock)
  4. food-composition references for Rumex acetosa

All sources →

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