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This medium-sized navel is seedless, sweet and low in acid - characterized by little to no pith and easy, clean separation from the rind. Unlike in true blood oranges, where the main pigmentation is due to anthocyanins, pigmentation in Cara Cara oranges is due to carotenoids, such as lycopene. [1] [2]
This group is the more common of the two, especially outside Asia; names such as napa cabbage, dà báicài (Chinese: 大白菜, "large white vegetable"); Baguio petsay or petsay wombok (); Chinese white cabbage; "wong a pak" (Hokkien, Fujianese); baechu (Korean: 배추), wongbok; hakusai (Japanese: 白菜 or ハクサイ) and "suann-tang-pe̍h-á" (Taiwanese) [2] usually refer to members of ...
The Korean name for napa cabbage, baechu (배추), is a nativized word from the Sino-Korean reading, baekchae, of the same Chinese character sets. Today in Mandarin Chinese, napa cabbage is known as dàbáicài (大白菜), literally "big white vegetable", as opposed to the "small white vegetable" that is known in English as bok choy.
A navel orange, showing the navel section. The navel orange is a variety of orange with a characteristic second fruit at the apex, which protrudes slightly like a human navel. This variety first was caused by a mutation in an orange tree, and first appeared in the early 19th century at a monastery in Bahia, Brazil. [1]
Bergamot orange: Citrus bergamia: Bitter orange: Citrus × aurantium: Blood lime: Citrus australasica var. sanguinea × 'Ellendale' Blood orange: Citrus × sinensis Blood Group Buddha's hand: Citrus medica var. sarcodactylis: Calamansi: Citrus × microcarpa: Cam sành: Citrus reticulata × sinensis: Cara Cara navel orange: Citrus × sinensis ...
Ryan Helmlinger, who lives in St. Tammany Parish, La., says before cooking his family's traditional cabbage recipe on New Year's Day, he hangs one cabbage leaf above the kitchen door to bring good ...
This is a list of cabbage dishes and foods. Cabbage (Brassica oleracea or variants) is a leafy green or purple biennial plant, grown as an annual vegetable crop for its dense-leaved heads. Cabbage heads generally range from 0.5 to 4 kilograms (1 to 9 lb), and can be green, purple and white.
"Cabbage" was originally used to refer to multiple forms of B. oleracea, including those with loose or non-existent heads. [20] A related species, Brassica rapa, is commonly named Chinese, napa or celery cabbage, and has many of the same uses. [21] It is also a part of common names for several unrelated species.