Search Results for: Yautia not sliced
globe artichoke and is, in fact, an entirely different vegetable. it doesn't hail from jerusalem, either, but rather is native to north america, where it was a staple food of native americans, who introduced it to the pilgrims. from iron to inulin jerusalem artichokes provide about calories per cup, sliced
such as irritable bowel syndrome, you especially may want to limit your intake—or avoid them altogether, particularly raw. that's because inulin remains undigested until it enters the colon, where it encounters bacteria that utilize it as a nutrient. called colonic fermentation, this process produces not...
https://www.berkeleywellness.com/healthy-eating/food/article/jerusalem-artichokes-tuber-worth-trying
this is not my beautiful house!
. . . and so on. not content with letting the days go by, mogrado and collaborators ( ) sequenced the dna of bloxamii-like collections from across the globe and determined, among other things, that entoloma bloxamii and entoloma madidum are distinct, european species, separable by spore size—and that...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/entoloma_bloxamii.html
other than a. campestris." in western north america, according to kerrigan, "[c]ontinued use of the name a. campestris . . . seems appropriate, but must be understood to apply in the far west on a provisional or approximate basis until western material is better known." unfortunately for those who do not
porphyrocephalus var. pallidus (most spores – μm long), agaricus andrewii ( – μm), and agaricus argenteus ( – μm). description: ecology: saprobic ; growing alone, gregariously, or in arcs and fairy rings , in meadows, fields, lawns, and grassy areas; north american distribution uncertain, but at present not...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/agaricus_campestris.html