Blackberry Nightshade (Solanum nigrum)

Small white flowers are a characteristic feature of BlackBerry Nightshade
Small white Solanum flowers.

Common names: Blackberry Nightshade, Black Berry Nightshade, Black Nightshade

Taxonomic name: Solanum nigrum

Family: Solanaceae

Flowering Time: Autumn to Spring

Uses: Food, mouth ulcers

Area of origin: Eurasia

Warnings: Can cause vomiting, nausea and diarrhoea. Don’t eat the green berries or leaves without boiling and throwing out the water.

Only eat the black berries.
Only eat the black berries!

Uses

Blackberry Nightshade (Solanum nigrum) is a common plant that suffers from a common misconception.

Many people believe that, because the common name contains ‘nightshade’, it is as poisonous as the unrelated Deadly Nightshade (Atropa belladonna), which it is only in the same Family with. Deadly Nightshade doesn’t occur locally, unless a plant has escaped someone’s garden.

The easiest way to tell the difference is that Deadly Nightshade has single berries while Blackberry Nightshade has clusters. The flowers are different too, Deadly Nightshade has single flowers that are a pink or purple colour, Blackberry Nightshade flowers are white and are in clusters.

Blackberry Nightshade is one of the Solanum family, and so is related to more commonly eaten vegetables such as Tomatoes and Potatoes.

Like many Solanums, you must be careful which part you eat and when. In the case of Blackberry Nightshade, we eat the ripe berries. When ripe, they are a purple – black colour and very soft. They fall easily from the plant when ready. The small, white flowers are distinctive of this plant.

Whatever you do, don’t eat the green berries. They can make you pretty ill.

The leaves are eaten in some parts of the world, cooked like Spinach but I don’t find them that tasty. Boiling the leaves and throwing out the water removes the Solanine but I think that the leaves are still unpleasantly bitter.

The juice of the leaves has been used on ulcers and can be made into an ointment for skin complaints and tumors and herpes. Small doses of the freshly squeezed juice of the leaves can be drunk to ease pain and kick off a sweat, though I’m not sure of safe doses. I have tried small amounts as a pain killer and it works a bit  and it did produce a heavy sweat. Caution is advised here.

Blackberry Nightshade has been used to induce sleep and as a narcotic, but I don’t recommend it at all due to the chemistry of the plant.

Blackberry nightshade jam.
A delicious jam made from the berries by our friend A.J.

Description

A bushy, herbaceous plant to 1.5 metres. Small, star shaped, white flowers with 5 petals and bright yellow stamen grow in clusters in the leaf forks. Hairy or slightly hairy leaves Fruit starts green and is toxic but ripens to black when it is pleasant to eat.



8 responses to “Blackberry Nightshade (Solanum nigrum)”

  1. Have you ever tried grafting onto it? I’ve been thinking of trying 🌶 on it for a while now. I have one that is about 3 years old in my chicken area. Chooks love the berries!

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  2. Hello I don’t know how it came to be in my flower pot because I had 1 plant in the pot and it withered. Yet the blackberry nightshade is what came back. It came with avenges too. Its all over my window blocking my other plants. Now in the last couple of days I see the other plant coming back. The blackberry night shade is like a curtain to the window. Its beautiful though.

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  3. I have just purchased some seeds in Brisbane Australia.
    Are the fruits similar to Huckleberries which I am also growing and made a nice jam from.

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