Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Can pumpkin flowers and pumpkin flowers eat together?

Can pumpkin flowers and pumpkin flowers eat together?

Pumpkin flowers and cantaloupe flowers can be eaten together.

1, pumpkin flowers and cantaloupe flowers will not have any side effects.

2. pumpkin flowers and melon flowers are rich in nutrition and can promote human health.

3. pumpkin flowers and cantaloupe flowers must be cooked or steamed together.

Pumpkin flowers is both a vegetable and a medicine. It has the auxiliary functions of clearing away damp-heat, eliminating swelling and removing blood stasis, resisting and preventing cancer, and treating jaundice, dysentery, cough, carbuncle conjunctivitis, mastitis and other inflammations, and is often used as health food. Practice has proved that its pollen can eliminate fatigue, enhance athletes' fighting spirit, make the elderly regain their youthful vitality, make children grow up wisdom, and make the weak and sick recover as soon as possible. It has a certain auxiliary effect on anemia, chronic constipation, large intestine diseases, hypertension, headache, stroke and other diseases in children, and can also help regulate the nervous state and improve insomnia. Rutin also has the auxiliary functions of promoting blood vessel and heart function, promoting blood coagulation and preventing bleeding.

Pumpkin flowers is unisexual and monoecious. Flowers are solitary in leaf axils, bright yellow or orange yellow. The corolla of male flower is bell-shaped, and perianth tube is formed at the base of calyx. Pollen grains are large, heavy and sticky, and cannot be blown away by the wind, so they can only be pollinated by insects. Female flower ovary is inferior, with stamens but degenerated, with a ring of nectary. The parthenocarpy rate is low, and artificial pollination is needed in winter and early spring when there are few insects. Male flowers and female flowers are originally differentiated from flower primordium in leaf axils, followed by sepals, petals, stamens and carpels from outside to inside. However, when the male flowers form buds, carpels stop developing and stamens begin to develop. In female flowers, stamens stop developing and carpels develop when buds form, thus forming pistils and ovaries.