Kelp
Kombu
/ Konbu
Haidai
Phylum
: Ochrophyta
Class
: Phaephyceae
Order
: Laminariales
Family
: Laminariaceae
Genus
: Laminaria
Species
Name : Laminaria digitata (Hudson) J. V. Lamouroux
Common
Names : kelp / kombu / konbu / haidai / oarweed

©Prof
Michael D Guiry
Laminaria
digitata / kelp around the shores of Ireland
Kelp
seaweed / algae is a brown seaweed, one of 2200 species of brown
seaweeds.
This
brown seaweed is kelp in Ireland, Europe and USA and it is also
known as Kombu / Konbu in Japan and Haidai in China.
26000
mt of the Giant Kelp Macrocystis pyrifera is harvested
off the Coast of California, USA per year.
This
brown seaweed is extensively used and again you will probably have
eaten or used this seaweed without knowing!
Its
E Numbers are E400 to E405 - and produces alginates. Again please
check out the UK Food Guide for more information - The
UK Food Guide
Along
Ireland's shores - kelp is the brown seaweed that just appears at
low water / tide. It is also known as oarweed.
A
traditional use for this Irish seaweed was as fertiliser but other
brown seaweeds such as Ascophyllum nodosum and Fucus serratus
are now gathered for their nutrient content.
Kelp
/ Laminaria was also gathered and burnt for "potash"
in the 18th Century. The potash was used for the glass industry.
It employed hundreds of people around the Irish coastlin, but ceased
in Ireland and Orkney & Western Isles, Scotland when other cheaper
sources were discovered.
Kelp
/ Laminaria gathering was revived in Ireland and Scotland
in the 19th Century to the 1930s when it was discovered that iodine
( I ) could be extracted from Laminaria and therefore used
for thyroid treatment. Again it was a cheaper source from Chile
that stopped this harvesting and extraction. However, Kelp is still
used today for its iodine content and for Thyroid problems.
In
Japan and China, Kelp / Laminaria is used to make Dashi - a traditional
soup stock and is used extensively in cooking. It can also be added
to root vegetables to reduce down their cooking time.
Uses
:
- Extraction
of alginic acid
- Fertiliser
- Commercially
used for toothpaste, soaps, ice-cream, tinned meats
- As
a binder, stablilizer, emulsifier or moulding agent.
Kelp
Recipes - Click Here

Dolphin
Sea Vegetable Company - Printable Order Form - Click Here