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This article is about the citrus fruit. For the herbs of the same name, see Monarda didyma and Monarda fistulosa.
Bergamot orange
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Rosids
Order: Sapindales
Family: Rutaceae
Genus: Citrus
Species: Citrus bergamia
Binomial name
Citrus bergamia
(Risso) Wright & Arn.
Dscf0545.jpg
A bergamot orange from Calabria, Italy

The bergamot Citrus aurantium subsp. bergamia (Risso & Poit.) synonym (Citrus bergamia Risso) is the size of an orange, with a yellow color similar to a lemon, and has a pleasant fragrance. The juice tastes less sour than lemon, but more bitter than grapefruit. Citrus bergamot is native to Asia and is commercially grown in Calabria (Italy), in France,[1] and in Ivory Coast.[2] Bergamot grows on small trees which blossom during the winter. The distinctive aroma of the bergamot is most commonly known for its use in Earl Grey tea,[3] though the juice of the fruit has also been used in Calabrian indigenous medicine as an herbal remedy for malaria[4] and its essential oil is popular in aromatherapy applications.

The bergamot orange is unrelated to the herbs of the same name, Monarda didyma and Monarda fistulosa, which are in the mint family.

Contents

[edit] Etymology

Italian bergamotta, modification of Turkish bey armudu; literally, the Bey's pear.

[edit] Production

Production mostly is limited to the Ionian coastal region of the province of Calabria in Italy, to such an extent that it is a symbol of the entire region. Most of the bergamot comes from a short stretch of land there where the temperature is favourable. It is also cultivated in Argentina, Brazil and the US state of Georgia, but the quality of the obtained essence is not comparable with the essence produced from the bergamots of Reggio Calabria due to the argillite, limestone and alluvial deposits found there.[citation needed]. High quality production is also found on the Southern coast of Turkey, mainly around the town of Antalya.

[edit] Uses

[edit] In food

An essence extracted from the aromatic skin of this sour fruit is used to flavour Earl Grey and Lady Grey teas, and confectionery. An Italian food manufacturer, Caffé Sicilia in Noto, Syracuse, Sicily, produces a commercial marmalade using the fruit as its principal ingredient[5][6]. It is also popular in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus as a preserve, made with bergamot peel boiled in sugar syrup.

[edit] As a fragrance

Bergamot peel is used in perfumery for its ability to combine with an array of scents to form a bouquet of aromas which complement each other. Approximately one third of all men's and about half of women’s perfumes contain bergamot essential oil[citation needed]. Bergamot was a component of the original Eau de Cologne developed in 17th century Germany — in 1704 the bergamot was first used to make the now famous "Eau de toilette" from the bergamot fruit by scooping out the pulp and squeezing the peel into sponges. One hundred bergamot oranges will yield about 3 ounces of bergamot oil.[7]

Bergamot peel is also used in aromatherapy to treat depression and as a digestive aid.[citation needed]

[edit] Companion plant

Bergamot's aromatic roots are thought to mask other nearby plants from pests that attack their roots, and so are sometimes grown as a companion in vegetable gardens.

[edit] Toxicology

In one study, oil of bergamot has been linked to certain phototoxic[8] effects (due to the chemical bergapten) and blocking the absorption of potassium in the intestines.[9]

Bergamot is also a source of bergamottin which, along with the chemically related compound 6’,7’-dihydroxybergamottin, is believed to be responsible for the grapefruit juice effect in which the consumption of the juice affects the metabolism of a variety of pharmaceutical drugs.[10]

[edit] In sunscreens

In the past psoralen — extracted from bergamot oil — has been used in tanning accelerators and sunscreens. Psoralens penetrate the skin where they increase the amount of direct DNA damage. This damage is responsible for sunburn and for an increased melanin production.
These substances were known to be photocarcinogenic since 1959,[11] but they were only banned from sunscreens in 1995.[12] These photocarcinogenic substances were banned years after they had caused many cases of malignant melanoma and deaths.[13] Psoralen is now used only in the treatment of certain skin disorders, as part of PUVA therapy.

[edit] Neuroprotective effects

Recently, bergamot essential oil has been found to reduce excitotoxic damage to cultured human neuronal cells in vitro and may therefore have neuroprotective properties. [14]

[edit] Witchcraft

In hoodoo rootwork, bergamot is used to control or command[15][16], and for this reason is used in a variety of spells and formulas in which a practitioner might wish to subdue another person.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ http://www.tradewindsfruit.com/bergamot.htm
  2. ^ http://www.aromacreations.com/essential.html
  3. ^ "Citrus bergamia Risso & Poit.". Germplasm Resources Information Network. http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?10698. 
  4. ^ Krippner, Stanley; Ashwin Budden, Michael Bova, Roberto Galante (September 2004). "The Indigenous Healing Tradition in Calabria, Italy". Proceedings of the Annual Conference for the Study of Shamanism and Alternative Modes of Healing (San Francisco, California: Chair for Consciousness Studies at Saybrook Graduate School and Research Center). http://www.stanleykrippner.com/papers/Calabria2004Rev_1B_.htm. Retrieved 10 February 2009. 
  5. ^ "Caffé Sicilia Noto" (HTML). Facebook. http://www.facebook.com/pages/Noto-Italy/Caffe-Sicilia-Noto/59815635165. Retrieved 10 February 2009. 
  6. ^ "Bergamot Marmalade by Caffe' Sicilia" (HTML). Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/Bergamot-Marmalade-by-Caffe-Sicilia/dp/B0009VK7LM. Retrieved 10 February 2009. 
  7. ^ A Practical Treatise on Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils, by William Theodore Brannt and Karl Schaedler
  8. ^ Girard J, Unkovic J, Delahayes J, Lafille C (1979). "[Phototoxicity of Bergamot oil. Comparison between humans and guinea pigs]" (in French). Dermatologica 158 (4): 229–43. PMID 428611. 
  9. ^ Finsterer J (2002). "Earl Grey tea intoxication". Lancet 359 (9316): 1484. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(02)08436-2. PMID 11988248. 
  10. ^ David G. Bailey, J. Malcolm, O. Arnold, J. David Spence (1998). "Grapefruit juice-drug interactions". Br J Clin Pharmacol 46 (2): 101–110. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2125.1998.00764.x. PMID 9723817. 
  11. ^ Urbach, F (1959). "Modification of ultraviolet carcinogenesis by photoactive agents". J Invest Dermatol 32 (2, Part 2): 373–378. PMID 13641813. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13641813?dopt=Abstract&holding=npg. 
  12. ^ Autier P; Dore J F; Schifflers E; et al. (1995). "Melanoma and use of sunscreens: An EORTC case control study in Germany, Belgium and France". Int. J. Cancer 61 (6): 749–755. doi:10.1002/ijc.2910610602. PMID 7790106. 
  13. ^ Autier P.  ; Dore J.-F.  ; Cesarini J.-P. (1997). "Should subjects who used psoralen suntan activators be screened for melanoma?" ([dead link]). Annals of oncology 8 (5): 435–437. doi:10.1023/A:1008205513771. ISSN 0923-7534. PMID 9233521. http://www.springerlink.com/content/t6222620211w50w9/. 
  14. ^ Corasaniti MT; Maiuolo, J; Maida, S; Fratto, V; Navarra, M; Russo, R; Amantea, D; Morrone, LA et al. (2007). "Cell signaling pathways in the mechanisms of neuroprotection afforded by bergamot essential oil against NMDA-induced cell death in vitro". Br J Pharmacol 151 (4): 518–529. doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0707237. PMID 17401440. PMC 2013960. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=17401440/. 
  15. ^ http://www.luckymojo.com/mojocatoils.html
  16. ^ http://www.conjureoils.com/hoodoo_oils.htm

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