Rambutans are grown in Thailand as well as Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Australia. Most rambutans are red, but in Malaysia a smaller, yellow rambutan can also be found. Rambutans grow in clusters on evergreen trees, and are hairy-looking exotic wonders!
Benefits of Rambutans
Rambutan fruit contains carbohydrate, protein, fat, phosphorus, iron, calcium and vitamin C. Skin tanin and fruits contain saponin. The seeds contain fat and polifenol. The leaves contain tannin and saponin. Skin stem contains tannin, saponin, flavonida, pectic substances, and iron.
There are usually a light brown seeds are high in some Fats and oils (mainly oleic acid and eicosanoic acid) valuable to industry, and is used in cooking and the manufacture of soap. Rambutans roots, bark, and leaves have various uses in the production of dyes and drugs.
Part of this plant can be used as a medicinal fruit and have benefits for health such as
Reduce Body Fat
Take some rambutan seeds eaten raw, or destroyed, and mashed and mixed with other food and eat.
Make skin softer face
Same way above where some rambutan seeds eaten raw, or destroyed, and mashed and mixed with other food, and eat.
Hair care
Capture some of the rambutan leaves, washed, and destroy until smooth. Little water added, and stirred into the dough flat until pasty. Then with the filtered piece cloth. Water collected is used to damp scalp. This is done every day to see the results.
Treat dysentery
Skin of rambutan fruit (10 fruit) to be washed, and cut-cut as necessary. Then added 3 glass of drinking water, then boiled water until the remaining half. After a cold, strained and drunk 2 times a day, each glass three-quarters.
Treat diabetes
Rambutan seed (5 seeds) dry fried (sangria), and mashed up into powder. Then move to the cup. After the cold water while drunk. Perform 1-2 times a day.
Cure fever
Rambutan skin that has been dried (15 g) washed. Then added 3 glass of water, then boiled until boiling for 15 minutes. After a cold, strained and drunk 3 times a day, each third section.
The rambutan, Nephelium lappaceum, is a fruit considered exotic to people outside of its native range. To people of Malaysia, Thailand, the Phillippines, Vietnam, Borneo, and other countries of this region, the rambutan is a relatively common fruit the same way an apple is common to many people in cooler climates. This may change for the rambutan over time as availability and distribution improve.