Uses
It is cultivated in warm and humid regions for its oleaginous seeds (producing between 20 and 200 kg of seeds annually per tree, depending on maturity), flowers and wood. The fat (solid at ambient temperature) is used for the care of the skin, to manufacture soap or detergents, and as a vegetable butter. It can also be used as aMahua Flowers
The mahua flower is edible and is a food item for tribals. They use it to make syrup for medicinal purposes. Mahua flowers are rich in total sugars, out of which reducing sugar are present in high amount. The flowers are also fermented to produce the alcoholic drink '' mahua'', a country liquor. Tribals of Surguja and Bastar in Chhattisgarh and peoples of Western Orissa, Santhals of Santhal Paraganas (Jharkhand), Koya tribals of North-East Andhra Pradesh, Bhil tribals in western Madhya Pradesh and tribals of North Maharashtra consider the tree and the ''mahua'' drink as part of their cultural heritage. ''Mahua'' is an essential drink for tribal men and women during celebrations. Mahua fruit are an essential food of Western Odisha people. The tree has a great cultural significance. There are many varieties of food prepared with its fruits and flowers. Also, Western Odisha people used to pray to this tree during festivals. The liquor produced from the flowers is largely colourless, opaque and not very strong. It is inexpensive and the production is largely done in home stills. ''Mahua'' flowers are also used to manufacture jam, which is made by tribal co-operatives in the Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra. Apart from that there is another company located in Wardha district of Maharashtra," Sevagram Agro Industries" who are dealing in Mahua products at very large scale and exporting innovative products such as seed oil and Mahua Jam to Arab countries. In many parts of Bihar, such as villages in the district of Siwan, the flowers of ''mahua'' tree are sun-dried; these sun-dried flowers are ground to flour and used to make various kinds of breads.Literature
Wine prepared from ''Madhūka'' flowers (Madhuca longifolia) finds mention in several Hindu, Jain and Buddhist literature works. It also finds mention in Ayurveda Samhitas which lists it among several different kinds of wine.Sacred tree
''Madhūka'' tree is the sacred tree of various temples in South India, including Irumbai Mahaleswarar Temple, Iluppaipattu Neelakandeswarar Temple, Tirukkodimaada Senkundrur at Tiruchengode, andMahua Oil
*Average oil Content: 32.92 to 57.53% * Refractive index: 1.452 * Fatty acid composition (acid, %) : palmitic (c16:0) : 24.5, stearic (c18:0) : 22.7, oleic (c18:1) : 37.0, linoleic (c18:2) : 14.3 * Elements : Carbon (C), Calcium (Ca), Nitrogen (N), Magnesium (Mg), Phosphorus (P), Sodium (Na) Trifed, a website of the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Government of India reports: "Mahua oil has emollient properties and is used in skin disease, rheumatism and headache. It is also a laxative and considered useful in habitual constipation, piles and haemorrhoids and as an emetic. Native tribes also used it as an illuminant and hair fixer." It has also been used as biodiesel.Other names
* Other botanical names: ''Bassia longifolia'' L., ''B. latifolia'' Roxb., ''Madhuca indica'' J. F. Gmel., ''M. latifolia'' (Roxb.) J.F.Macbr., ''Illipe latifolia'' (Roxb.) F.Muell., ''Illipe malabrorum'' (Engl.) Note: the authentic genus '' Bassia'' is in the Chenopodiaceae. The names ''B. longifolia'' and ''B. latifolia'' are illegitimate. * Varieties: ** ''M. longifolia'' var. ''latifolia'' (Roxb.) A.Chev. (=''B. latifolia'' (Roxb)) ** ''M. longifolia'' var. ''longifolia'' * Vernacular names: **Santali:''matkom'' **Bengali:''mohua'' **Oriya:"Mahula" "ମହୂଲ" **English: honey tree, butter tree **French: ''illipe'', ''arbre à beurre'', ''bassie'', ''madhuca'' **India: ''moha, mohua, madhuca, kuligam, madurgam, mavagam, nattiluppai, tittinam, mahwa, mahua, mowa, moa, mowrah, mahuda (Gujarati-મહુડા) '' **Marathi: "Mahu" and "muvda" in Pawari local tribal lang (Nandurbar, Maharashtra). / "Moha" **Rajasthan: "dolma" in mevadi and marwari **Sri Lanka: මී ''mee'' in Sinhala **Tamil: iluppai (இலுப்பை), **Telugu: vippa (విప్ప), **Myanmar: ''ကမ်းဇော်'' * Synonymous names for this tree in some of the Indian states are ''mahua'' and ''mohwa'' in Hindi-speaking belt, ''mahwa, mahula'', ''Mahula'' in Oriya and ''maul'' in Bengal, ''mahwa'' and ''mohwro'' inDifferent views and aspects of ''M. longifolia'' var. ''latifolia''
References
External links
*Bibliography
*Boutelje, J. B. 1980. Encyclopedia of world timbers, names and technical literature. *Duke, J. A. 1989. Handbook of Nuts. CRC Press. *Encke, F. et al. 1993. Zander: Handwörterbuch der Pflanzennamen, 14. Auflage. *Govaerts, R. & D. G. Frodin. 2001. World checklist and bibliography of Sapotaceae. *Hara, H. et al. 1978–1982. An enumeration of the flowering plants of Nepal. *Matthew, K. M. 1983. The flora of the Tamil Nadu Carnatic. *McGuffin, M. et al., eds. 2000. Herbs of commerce, ed. 2. *Nasir, E. & S. I. Ali, eds. 1970–. Flora of estPakistan. *Pennington, T. D. 1991. The genera of the Sapotaceae. *Porcher, M. H. et al. Searchable World Wide Web Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database (MMPND) - on-line resource. *Saldanha, C. J. & D. H. Nicolson. 1976. Flora of Hassan district. *Saldanha, C. J. 1985–. Flora of Karnataka. {{Taxonbar, from=Q2720146 longifolia Flora of the Indian subcontinent Non-timber forest products