enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Dioscorea alata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioscorea_alata

    Dioscorea alata – also called ube (/ ˈ uː b ɛ,-b eɪ /), ubi, purple yam, or greater yam, among many other names – is a species of yam (a tuber).The tubers are usually a vivid violet-purple to bright lavender in color (hence the common name), but some range in color from cream to plain white.

  3. Yam (vegetable) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yam_(vegetable)

    In Okinawa, purple yams (Dioscorea alata) are grown. This purple yam is popular as lightly deep-fried tempura, as well as being grilled or boiled. Additionally, the purple yam is a common ingredient of yam ice cream with the signature purple color. Purple yam is also used in other types of traditional wagashi sweets, cakes, and candy. [citation ...

  4. Māori potatoes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Māori_potatoes

    More South American varieties came with sealers and whalers in the early 19th century. [6] Taewa became a staple Māori food crop before organised European settlement, displacing traditional crops such as sweet potatoes (Māori: kūmara), taro, yams (Māori: uwhi) and bracken fern root (Māori: aruhe) as a primary carbohydrate source. [1]

  5. Xanthosoma sagittifolium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xanthosoma_sagittifolium

    Cultivars with purple stems or leaves are also variously called blue taro, purplestem taro, purplestem tannia, and purple elephant's ear. [8] [9] Tannia is among the world’s most important tuber crops and feeds 400 million people worldwide. [10] There are multiple varieties, [11] the two most common being the red flesh and the white flesh ...

  6. List of sweet potato cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sweet_potato_cultivars

    Even though these growers called their products yams, true yams are significantly different. All sweet potatoes are variations of one species: I. batatas. Yams are any of various tropical species of the genus Dioscorea. A yam tuber is starchier, dryer, and often larger than the storage root of a sweet potato, and the skin is more coarse. [3]

  7. How Can You Tell the Difference Between a Yam and Sweet ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/whats-difference-between-yams-sweet...

    Sweet potatoes come in a few varieties and be orange, purple, or even white in flesh. The most common type of sweet potato has bright orange flesh with smooth, rosy brown skin.

  8. Taro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taro

    Kalo is taro's Hawaiian name. The local crop plays an important role in Hawaiian culture and Indigenous religion. Taro is a traditional staple of the native cuisine of Hawaii. Some of the uses for taro include poi, table taro (steamed and served like a potato), taro chips, and lūʻau leaf (to make laulau). In Hawaii, kalo is farmed under ...

  9. Poi (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poi_(food)

    Hawaiians traditionally cook the starchy, potato-like heart of the taro corm for hours in an underground oven called an imu, which is also used to cook other types of food such as pork, carrots, and sweet potatoes. [7] Breadfruit can also be made into poi (i.e. poi ʻulu), Hawaiians however consider this inferior in taste to that of the taro. [8]