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  2. Root vegetables are the unsung heroes of the kitchen, offering earthy flavors, hearty textures, and endless versatility.

  3. Mangelwurzel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangelwurzel

    The roots are prepared boiled like potato for serving mashed, diced, or in sweet curries. Animals are known to thrive upon this plant; both its leaves and roots provide nutritious food. George Henderson, a 20th-century English farmer and author on agriculture, described mangel beets as one of the best fodders for dairying , as milk production ...

  4. American cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_cuisine

    Though not anywhere near as productive a region as the top three apple-producing regions, apples have been a staple of New England foodways since at least the 1640s, and it is here that a very high amount of heirloom varieties are found, many of them gaining renewed interest as part of locavore movements and the re-emergence of cider as a ...

  5. Edible plant stem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edible_plant_stem

    There are also many wild edible plant stems. In North America, these include the shoots of woodsorrel (usually eaten along with the leaves), chickweeds, galinsoga, common purslane, Japanese knotweed, winter cress and other wild mustards, thistles (de-thorned), stinging nettles (cooked), bellworts, violets, amaranth and slippery elm, among many others.

  6. Cuisine of the Midwestern United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuisine_of_the_Midwestern...

    Today, restaurants in Chicago's Greektown serve typical dishes like gyros and cheese saganaki. [ 14 ] Throughout the city there are many variations on classic sandwiches like the Chicago-style hot dog or club sandwiches served on bagels or other artisan breads like sourdough or brioche with complex spreads like aioli and piri piri sauce.

  7. Indigenous cuisine of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_cuisine_of_the...

    "We landed at a Watlala village 200 men of Flatheads of 25 houses 50 canoes built of Straw, we were treated verry kindly by them, they gave us round root near the size of a hens egg roasted which they call Wap-to (wapato) to eate . . . . which they roasted in the embers until they became Soft" —William Clark, Lewis and Clark Expedition

  8. Murnong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murnong

    The servant William Todd wrote, 'We have commenced eating roots the same as the natives do.' [14] Surveyor and explorer Thomas Mitchell came across a community of Aboriginal people who cultivated and harvested murnong tubers with specialised tools on the plains around the Hopkins River on 17 September 1835.

  9. Native American ethnobotany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_ethnobotany

    They would also eat the raw roots, believing that they permanently prevented conception. [31] They would also eat the roots, [32] as would the Algonquin people, who cooked them like potatoes. [33] Cleome serrulata, used by tribes in the southwest to make an infusion to treat stomach illnesses and fevers. Poultices can be used on the eyes. [34]