Sentences with phrase «tuber called»

One of the best sources of resistant starch in my opinion comes from a small tuber called a tiger nut.

Not exact matches

It produces buds or tubers, called buttons, that have hallucinogenic properties.
This, previously unheard of, tuber was all the more intriguing when a quick internet search revealed that it was also called a Jerusalem artichoke.
Later, when they arrived in France, Parisian street vendors began calling them topinambours, French for tubers.
While they are called «nuts,» these cute little round tubers are actually the root from the chufa sedge plant.
They are called root vegetables for lack of a better generic term, but include both true roots such as tuberous roots and taproots, as well as non-roots such as tubers, rhizomes, corms, and bulbs.
Both the burdock root and its leaves are eaten as a carbohydrate rich tuber in many Eastern European countries similarly to potatoes and carrots, and in Japan it's cultivated and eaten as a vegetable called Gobo.
Instead, they're tubers (like potatoes) from a plant called the yellow nutsedge or Cyperus esculentus, which is actually considered a common lawn and garden weed in Missouri.
And, interestingly, all the tubers and gourds that rural populations eat also provide a very important type of food for those bugs, called resistant starch, something that only the bacteria in our guts can digest and utilize, and it makes them thrive.
Formed naturally in various meats, green veggies, tubers and several types of yeast, lipoic acid is comparable to a vitamin in that it can also be man - made in a lab so it can be taken as an anti-inflammatory supplement (which is then called alpha lipoic acid).
Turns out they're technically called «Cyperus esculentus tubers», are not actually nuts at all, and are one of the most ancient food sources known to humanity!
So whether you are a noob tuber or a skilled sniper, this Call of Duty has something specifically for you... also dogs.
Aconite Also called known as zconiti tuber, aconitum, angustifolium, monkshood, radix aconti, and wolfsbane.
So here is my call to arms in pursuit of venal journalists, mocking You - tubers, boring bloggers and sad little trolls who use the Internet to propagate hatred, ridicule and contempt.
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