Nettle leaf and nettle root are different medicines.
The leaf is the food and tea plant. The root is the prostate and urinary plant. The seed is a smaller tradition. The page should keep them separate.
- Young leaf: the main food part. Cook it, dry it, or steep it.
- Mineral green: nettle is valued for calcium, iron, magnesium, potassium, and silica.
- Protein-rich dried leaf: dried nettle leaf contains more protein than most leafy greens.
- Leaf tea: traditional spring tonic and daily mineral tea.
- Root: used in herbal products for lower urinary tract symptoms linked to benign prostate enlargement.
- Seed: a smaller herbal tradition, usually sold as niche vitality or kidney-support products. Keep this as emerging, not central.
- The sting: fresh hairs inject irritating compounds. Heat, drying, blending, or crushing removes the problem for food use.
The first lesson is part literacy. Leaf is not root. Root is not seed.