Our 2025 EFN seed catalogue is now live! Featuring over 130 new varieties and over 640 total varieties, sourced from over 50 different growers from across the country. Huge thanks to all of our growers, volunteers, and to our stellar seed-house team in Minnesota! Each of you make this work possible.

Screwbean Mesquite
Screwbean Mesquite
Screwbean Mesquite
Screwbean Mesquite

Screwbean Mesquite

Regular price $5.00 Sale

Strombocarpa pubescens

Origin: Thermal, California

Improvement status: Wild

Seeds per packet: ~15

BOTANICAL SAMPLE - NOT GERMINATION TESTED

Life cycle: Perennial

Screwbean mesquite, also known as tornillo mesquite, is an edible and medicinal southwest desert native leguminous shrub or small tree. It has gorgeous blossoms, unique corkscrew-shaped edible pods, and nutrient rich seeds. Growing to over 20 feet tall, it thrives in damp or saline soil, including much of the Rio Grande valley and along the Colorado River. Long utilized by human beings, it is also an important resource for many animal species.

Like other mesquites, the nutritious seedpods are the primary food item. Pima people have a tradition of cooking the pods in dirt-covered pits over a few days (they also use the plant to make hairdye and for ink used on pottery). Many Indigenous peoples historically utilized screwbean mesquite as a staple food source, making cakes, porridges, and syrup from the pods. Ground or mashed mesquite pods are high in protein and contain good amounts of fiber, calcium, potassium, magnesium, iron, and zinc, along with the essential amino acid lysine. Its sweet flavor has hints of caramel. Roasted, it can even make a passable coffee substitute.

Our seed, from Thermal, California, came to us from the good folks at Sheffield's Seeds in Locke, NY.

GROWING TIPS: Pour near-boiling water over the seeds then soak for 24 hours. If this doesn’t cause seeds to imbibe, sulfuric acid treatment may be used. Seeds need no stratification. Sow ¾ inch deep. Of course prefers dry areas, so do not overwater, but you might be surprised at how adaptable the plant is.

NOTE: The photo of brownish pods is from Katja Schulz and is shared here under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license. The green pods photo is from user pomipilid and is shared here under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. The flower photo is from Curtis Clark and is used here under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 Generic license.