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  2. Ever Found Green Sprouts In Your Garlic? Here's How It ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/ever-found-green-sprouts-garlic...

    The short answer is: sprouted garlic is 100 percent safe to eat, but it has a distinctly different flavor. Besides maybe bad breath, there are no side effects to eating sprouted garlic. They may ...

  3. What’s the Green Sprout Inside My Garlic, and Is It Safe to Eat?

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/green-sprout-inside-garlic...

    This is what to do when your garlic turns into a lean, green, sprouting machine.

  4. The truth about the green germs on garlic - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/lifestyle/2017/01/11/the...

    As garlic becomes older, however, that germ turns green, grows, and, as many will say, becomes bitter. The Joy of Cooking asserts that garlic with a green germ is old and shouldn't be used.

  5. Parkia speciosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkia_speciosa

    At this stage they may be eaten raw, fried or pickled. Young tender pods with undeveloped beans can be used whole in stir-fried dishes. [6] The seeds are also dried and seasoned for later consumption. When dried, the seeds turn black. Petai beans or seeds look like broad beans. Like mature broad beans, they may have to be peeled before cooking.

  6. Phytohaemagglutinin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phytohaemagglutinin

    As a toxin, it can cause poisoning in monogastric animals, such as humans, through the consumption of raw or improperly prepared legumes, e.g., beans. Measured in haemagglutinating units (hau), a raw red kidney bean may contain up to 70,000 hau, but this is reduced to between 200 and 400 hau when properly cooked. [ 5 ]

  7. Green bean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_bean

    Raw green beans are 90% water, 7% carbohydrates, 2% protein, and contain negligible fat (table). In a 100-gram (3.5-ounce) reference amount, raw green beans supply 31 calories and are a moderate source (range 10–19% of the Daily Value) of vitamin C, vitamin K, vitamin B 6, and manganese, while other micronutrients are in low supply (table).

  8. What Exactly Is Jarred Garlic? Is It Ever OK To Use? - AOL

    www.aol.com/exactly-jarred-garlic-ever-ok...

    Jarred garlic can work really well in ready to eat sauces, like a salad dressing, where raw might be too strong or overpowering, but can work just as well in cooked applications like in these ...

  9. Colletotrichum lindemuthianum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colletotrichum_lindemuthianum

    Colletotrichum lindemuthianum is a fungus which causes anthracnose, or black spot disease, of the common bean plant (Phaseolus vulgaris).It is considered a hemibiotrophic pathogen because it spends part of its infection cycle as a biotroph, living off of the host but not harming it, and the other part as a necrotroph, killing and obtaining nutrients from the host tissues.