Alicia Silverstone worried fans this week when she posted a TikTok clip of herself nibbling a poisonous berry she found along a sidewalk on a trip to England. The Clueless actor said she thought the fruit might have been a tomato, but realized it wasn't after a couple bites revealed an off-tasting, peppery flavor. That tomato lookalike seems to have been a Jerusalem cherry (Solanum pseudocapsicum), which, along with actual tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, potatoes, and tomatillos, is a member of the Solanaceae, or nightshade, family, per the AP.
All parts of the Jerusalem cherry, which is sold as a houseplant, are poisonous not only to humans but also to dogs, cats, and horses, according to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The plant's unripe berries can be especially dangerous, causing central nervous system and gastrointestinal symptoms, including delirium, abdominal pain, fever, vomiting, paralysis, and more. Consuming large amounts can be fatal. Silverstone was lucky because, she says, she didn't swallow the berries, and also perhaps because the berries were reddish-orange, which indicates they were ripe. Other toxic lookalikes:
- The poisonous Carolina horsenettle (Solanum carolinense) fruit also resembles tomatoes. Its common name, devil's potato, is a dead giveaway.
- Other members of the nightshade family are poisonous to varying degrees. The aptly named deadly nightshade (Atropa belladonna), for instance, is so toxic it was used as a murder weapon during the Middle Ages. Its berries, however, could be mistaken for blueberries. Pokeweed and Virginia creeper fruits also resemble blueberries, and both can be fatal if ingested.
- Lilies, which are toxic, have an uncanny resemblance to edible onion and garlic grasses, especially when they first emerge.
- Those edible wild onion and garlic grasses, which sprout in lawns and uncultivated areas in spring, have other toxic lookalikes, too, including death camas (Toxicoscordion nuttallii), a common cause of livestock poisoning that is dangerous for humans, too.
Bottom line: If you aren't 100% sure that something is food, please don't put it into your mouth, writes Jessica Damiano. If you think you've swallowed a toxic plant by mistake, contact a poison control center at www.poison.org or 1-800-222-1222.
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