• Blackcurrant

    Origin

    black + currant

    Full definition of blackcurrant

    Noun

    blackcurrant

    (plural blackcurrants)
    1. A shrub, Ribes nigrum, that produces small, very dark purple, edible berries.
      • 1993, R. D. Davidson, 19: The vegetation of Lough Neagh wetlands, R.B. Wood, R.V. Smith (editors), Lough Neagh: The Ecology of a Multipurpose Water Resource, Monographae Biologicae: Volume 69, page 487,Blackcurrant (Ribes nigrum) and guelder rose (Viburnum opulus) are frequent but alder buckthorn (Frangula alnus) a common constituent of East Anglian carr is very rare.
      • 2003, European Scientific Cooperative on Phytotherapy, ESCOP Monographs: The Scientific Foundation for Herbal Medicinal Products, page 426,Blackcurrant leaf has a diuretic action 11,12,14, therefore it should not be taken concurrently with diuretics indicated for cardiac or renal insufficiency except on medical advice.
      • 2005, Bernard Stocks, The Teenage Pensioner, page 112,On this first day I concentrated on bushes - gooseberry and blackcurrants for the bottom end borders, rhododendrons for the front inside the wall and a couple of hydrangeas in the spaces left in the monoblocking to the left of the front door.
    2. The berry borne by this shrub.
      • 2003, Maria Villegas, Kay Halsey, Sarah Randell, A Little Taste of France, page 120,Their wines are intense and elegant, tasting of blackcurrants and made to be aged.
      • 2011, Katherine Swift, The Morville Hours: The Story of a Garden, page 222,Blackcurrant jam is easy, but this year I have left the blackcurrants so long that they are sweet and ripe enough to eat raw: delicious rolled in a crunch of granulated sugar.
      • 2012, Tong Kwee Lim, Edible Medicinal And Non-Medicinal Plants, Volume 4: Fruits, page 28,Blackcurrants can be eaten fresh, on its own, or with ice cream or in mixed fruit salad.
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