While out in the gardens today I noticed a curious plant creeping along the garden fence. The creeper had tiny melon-like leaves and petite yet thickly veined cream color flowers. And in between the flowers and the leaves, I could see beautiful pendulum-like fruits dangling down.
I managed to identify the plant as a Balsam Apple or Bitter Melon. (Momordica balsamina)
Turns out that this is yet another wild edible plant with an array of medicinal properties. It just goes to show that nature provides so much more than grocery stores ever can.
"The leaves and young fruits of Momordica balsamina are cooked and eaten as a vegetable in Cameroon, Sudan and southern Africa. The bitter young fruits have been reported widely as edible, whereas the ripe fruits cause vomiting and diarrhea, and can be poisonous. The bright red fruit pulp is eaten in Namibia. Can harm dogs if they eat the ripe fruit." - source
In traditional Zulu medicine, this plant is said to be used for digestive complaints and diabetes, and it is also used as a poultice for burns. And the leaf sap can even be used as an agent to clean metal with.
"According to Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk (1962), the plant contains a bitter principle momordicin. They report that 'overseas a liniment, made by infusing the fruit (minus the seed) in olive or almond oil, is used as an application to chapped hands, burns and haemorrhoids and the mashed fruit is used as a poultice'. This practice probably explains the species name balsamina. Watt and Breyer-Brandwijk also list many medicinal and other uses of M. balsamina in tropical Africa and elsewhere." source
Now I am not too sure whether I will be messing around with this plant just yet, the thin grey line between the medicinal and the "hey you might die" is a little too vague for my liking. Maybe after some strenuous research, but for now, I think I will give it a hard pass and admire it for its beauty instead.