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  2. List of Pakistani spices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Pakistani_spices

    Download as PDF; Printable version ... پاکستانی مصالحے) The following is a partial list of spices commonly used in Pakistani ... Mucuna pruriens:

  3. Mucuna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucuna

    Some Mucuna species are used as food plants by caterpillars of Lepidoptera. These include Morpho butterflies and the two-barred flasher (Astraptes fulgerator), which is sometimes found on M. holtonii and perhaps others. The plant pathogenic fungus Mycosphaerella mucunae is named for being first discovered on Mucuna.

  4. Mucuna pruriens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucuna_pruriens

    Mucuna pruriens is a tropical legume native to Africa and tropical Asia and widely naturalized and cultivated. [2] Its English common names include monkey tamarind , velvet bean , Bengal velvet bean , Florida velvet bean , Mauritius velvet bean , Yokohama velvet bean , cowage , cowitch , lacuna bean , and Lyon bean . [ 2 ]

  5. Itching powder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itching_powder

    Itching powder was created from Mucuna pruriens in the early-19th century as a cure for lost feeling in the epidermis. When a person would lose feeling on their skin in conditions such as paralysis, the powder (mixed with lard to form an ointment) was used as a local stimulant believed to treat the condition. [9] [10]

  6. Mucuna urens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucuna_urens

    The word mucuna is the vernacular name for Mucuna urens in an indigenous language of Brazil, and in 1763 this word was chosen by the French botanist Michel Adanson in his Familles naturelles des plantes to be the generic epithet for this genus of legumes, [3] [4] although M. urens was itself known as Dolichos urens until being transferred to Mucuna many years later.

  7. Category:Mucuna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mucuna

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  8. Mucuna paniculata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucuna_paniculata

    Mucuna paniculata is a species of flowering, woody vine in the family Fabaceae, the bean family. It is native to northern Madagascar where it is locally known in Malagasy as vohinkovika . [ 1 ] [ 4 ] It flowers between June and August.

  9. Mucuna bracteata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucuna_bracteata

    Mucuna bracteata has green leaf foliage with leguminous nodules producing fixed nitrogen leading to amino acids. The seed of the legume of the Mucuna bracteata weighs about 90–190 mg each and is black in colour. [1] This seed, as it is a legume, provides health benefits on its own, individually, for direct consumption.