Unlike many larger parrots, fig parrots feed very quietly on the kernels of many tiny seeds, including those of figs, buttonwood and ironwood. |
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The implement slices the tops off the grain hulls and then squeezes the pulp and kernels from the cob while leaving the hulls attached. |
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Other time-honored trout baits include kernels of corn and pinches of marshmallow. |
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At Obigwe, pottery again proved to be the predominant find, along with a pipe bowl, burnt kernels, and a broken copper bangle. |
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Eventually, of course, they run into other such complexes expanding from different kernels. |
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An average ear of corn weighs from 10 to 14 ounces and yields about 1 cup of kernels. |
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The germinated kernels were transferred to potting soil and grown to maturity in a greenhouse. |
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You get pumping Latin jazz four nights a week while you sit on comfy couches tasting Latino snacks like tostados and corn kernels. |
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The coffee is then pulped to remove the berry kernels and then the beans are dried. |
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The Dagomba tribe of the Gold Coast boil the kernels, add salt and shea butter, and eat the mixture. |
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Some barley heads have split already, the beaded kernels fallen at the urging of the sun's heat. |
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Inside, a large circular stone is rapidly turning and grinding dried corn kernels into flour, using only the power of the running water. |
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If making a soup or a sauce, extract the milky juice from the bits of kernels left on the cob by scraping the cob with the dull side of a knife. |
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Two kernels per spike were collected for determination of dry weight and moisture content. |
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He's a prissy fellow, and he takes about 10 or 15 seconds just to peck a hole that is large enough to pull one of the kernels through. |
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When almost done, peel back husks, brush lightly with butter or oil, and grill kernels directly over fire, one to two minutes. |
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The product used as filling for these pillows of buckwheat is actually the hulls or husks that protect the kernels. |
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Beneath is a stuffing-like blend of enlarged, earthy huitlacoche and grilled corn kernels rolled with cotilla, lime and ancho chile. |
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Some varieties of corn were processed into hominy by boiling the kernels in a weak lye solution of hardwood ashes and water. |
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As she walked into the kitchen he was just in the process of heaping handfuls of the kernels into the corn popper that was already heated up. |
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There are children out there that don't know you can buy the actual kernels and pop them, in a pan, on the stove. |
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He recounted that cashew apples and their juice were consumed and that the nuts were roasted in fires and the kernels eaten. |
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If you don't have access to a grinder to crack wheat for cereal, you can cook the wheat kernels. |
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If endosperm cell division is halted at an early stage, kernels abort and fail to set seed. |
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The following steps describe how our kuia prepared the karaka kernels for eating. |
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Back then the plant had small cobs and small, hard kernels of little nutritional value. |
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The double dagger on chromosome 6 indicates the region that is preferentially homozygous W22 in both mutant and wild-type kernels. |
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Stress cracks are internal splits within kernels, and indicate that the corn underwent severe drying conditions. |
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For interesting crunch and flavor try tossing the kernels into your cereal or scattering them on top of the cream cheese on your morning bagel. |
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It is a type of fungus called an endophyte that lives inside the kernels of corn plants, neither harming nor benefiting its host. |
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Crack a handful of whole new season's walnuts, remove the kernels from the shells and halve and quarter them. |
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The salt water caused the kernels to swell and the puffed grain filled the hold with a fluffy nature's life preserver. |
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From the salad menu, I chose the vine leaves stuffed with rice and pine kernels and served with sour cream. |
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Scatter the slivers of garlic and the pine kernels on top of the meat mixture, pressing them down a bit with the flat of your hand. |
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Wheat fields are ripening with the kernels in the soft to hard dough stages. |
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While the dry weather is excellent for combining, there have been reports of wheat kernels almost too dry, a factor which can reduce weight. |
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The export of palm oil and kernels, copra, cocoa, fish, and timber constitute the bulk of the country's trade. |
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The presence in wheat kernels of a cathepsin B gene led the search for its barley counterpart. |
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High air temperatures and uneven moisture content within the kernel result in a much higher incidence of stress cracks in the kernels. |
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Bulgur is white or red, hard or soft, whole-wheat kernels that have been cracked, partially cooked and dried. |
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I had a thinly-sliced cucumber salad with shallots, a sprinkling of crumbled feta cheese and pine kernels. |
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Gordon's statements about automobile steering have some kernels of truth but are also inaccurate. |
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The story also is an example of how kernels of truth are often contained in jokes or humorous anecdotes. |
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These charges got considerable play in the press, and it must be said they contained kernels of truth. |
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The fine crafting of the words and the kernels of human truth they contain come together as sympathetic wholes. |
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It's hard to say more without giving away the precious kernels of the plot. |
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All the recipes I follow tell you to pop the popcorn in a pot with oil and plain popcorn kernels. |
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Cover the kernels with the corn stock by one inch, reserving the remaining stock for the garnish. |
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Because it takes our time and effort to recompile and reinstall kernels, we modified only four computers needed to cluster seven processors. |
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The moisture inside the corn kernels was expanding, violently bursting out of the hard shells. |
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To produce the paste, blanched kernels of sweet almonds are ground, mixed with water and sugar, and cooked to a smooth consistency. |
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Hence an attempt was made to use tender coconuts and kernels in desserts such as ice cream, kheer, fruit salad, pudding and halwa. |
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Linux kernels and most other Unix-like systems care about the leap seconds and handle them correctly. |
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Polyembryony was further characterized by determining DNA content and fingerprints of embryos obtained from 157 polyembryonic kernels. |
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Infected kernels may be pink or show a white starburst pattern radiating from the top of the kernel. |
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With a large, heavy knife cut the kernels off close to the cob, in a strip down one side. |
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At first, the Steller's jays availed themselves of the birdseed and unshelled peanuts on the grass, as well as a few kernels from the tray. |
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In other words, operating systems based on this architecture have much smaller kernels. |
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Mold spores adhere more tightly to the rough surfaces than to the smooth skin of undamaged kernels. |
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When the first kernels pop, cover the pot and shake it across the burner so the kernels don't burn. |
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Airy and snackable, its a great alternative to caramel corn, and won't leave you with pesky popcorn kernels stuck in your teeth. |
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Halfway through cooking roughly chop the tomatoes and add them, then, once the wheat is cooked, stir in the toasted pine kernels and chopped mint leaves. |
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The kernels split lengthwise so the white inside of the kernel is visible. |
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The kernels are available shelled or unshelled, toasted or raw. |
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For pesto, the traditional method is to put basil leaves into the mortar before adding a fat clove of garlic, then some local olive oil and a handful of pine kernels. |
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I plumped for whole grilled lemon sole with smoked salmon and wasabi butter, while my companion chose grilled halibut with wild mushrooms on creamed leeks and pine kernels. |
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She started by excising the embryos from immature wheat kernels. |
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Most grain mold pathogens become associated with the kernel in the field but can grow within the colonized kernel and even spread to adjacent kernels during storage. |
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But cliches, like myths, are often built around kernels of pure truth. |
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There are kernels of truth in even its most outrageous statements. |
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Analysts attempt to winnow a few kernels of truth from a mass of falsehood in order to construct a comprehensible mosaic from a swiftly flowing stream of uncertain data. |
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A multiclass SVM architecture was designed to place less discriminatory load on weaker discriminators, and novel SVM kernels were used to boost discrimination strength. |
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Especially where scab is evident in the field, the combine should be set for maximum cleaning, with higher blower speeds to remove the small shriveled diseased kernels. |
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With a sharp knife, slide the blade down the ear of corn removing kernels. |
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Both diseases result in lightweight, shriveled kernels that may be moldy. |
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To practice our jumps, we became kernels of popcorn in a hot skillet. |
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He munched his way through 165 kernels, picking them up with a toothpick. |
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Processing of maize further reduces the nutritive value by removing the outer layers of the kernels, which contain a significant portion of the nutrients. |
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Fusarium ear rot may be accompanied by starburst patterns on the kernels. |
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Add the cracked peach stones, but remove the inside kernels. |
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This oil is harvested from the kernels of the palm tree, thus the name. |
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The kernels are dried in the sun, then parched, often by smoking on racks. |
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Using a grater set over a bowl, grate the corn kernels off the cobs. |
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In addition to eating corn fresh, the kernels could also be dried to form a flour for breads and cakes, and the cobs were turned into corn pipes and toys. |
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Cut the corn from the cobs and place the kernels in a large skillet. |
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One high street shop, Food Emporium Culina, has closed down, so shoppers will have to go elsewhere for their toasted flaked almonds, pine kernels and pistachio nuts. |
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Popcorn has never tasted so good to Lavonne Sanders, an entrepreneur who has turned popping golden kernels of corn into a lucrative business venture. |
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As she walked into the kitchen The Captain was just in the process of heaping handfuls of the kernels into the corn popper that was already heated up. |
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Add the corn kernels and simmer until tender, about five minutes. |
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The food is gutsy and unpretentious, and recipes such as squid stuffed with raisins and pine kernels, or polenta and Seville orange cake, certainly do it for me. |
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His entreaty is hard to swallow, given the biographical kernels in all of his plays, but easy to take, given the unguarded, imploring nature of his gaze. |
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The resident data structures of the kernels serve as caches on the swappable databases maintained by the managers. |
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This time I skipped the fattoush and instead had some tabouleh and beetroot salad with corn kernels, which I tried out of curiosity. |
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The cooked, unripe kernels may also be shaved off the cob and served as a vegetable in side dishes, salads, garnishes, etc. |
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Pound fresh basil leaves with parmesan, pine kernels and olive oil in a pestle and mortar for the perfect pesto sauce. |
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The most highly polished rice kernels are used to prepare daiginjo sake, which tends to be light and fragrant. |
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This blanching kills enzymes in both kernels and cob that otherwise gradually destroy corn's flavor molecules. |
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Maize can also be harvested and consumed in the unripe state, when the kernels are fully grown but still soft. |
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By the end of the growing season, the kernels dry out and become difficult to chew without cooking them tender first in boiling water. |
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The saprophytic and pathogenic fungi on barley kernels induce various symptoms. |
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Both cultivars bear fruits with a single large kernel, rather than the usual two to four smaller kernels. |
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The Brazilian dessert canjica is made by boiling maize kernels in sweetened milk. |
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The leafy stalk of the plant produces separate pollen and ovuliferous inflorescences or ears, which are fruits, yielding kernels or seeds. |
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During this time the nutmeg shrinks away from its hard seed coat until the kernels rattle in their shells when shaken. |
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Our jumbo size popcorn gives snackers bigger and fluffier kernels, ready to customize and capture all your favorite toppings. |
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Cancha, which are roasted maize chulpe kernels, are a very popular snack food in Peru, and also appears in traditional Peruvian ceviche. |
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Popcorn kernels over 5,000 years old, said to be still poppable, have been found in New Mexico. |
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Popcorn consists of kernels of certain varieties that explode when heated, forming fluffy pieces that are eaten as a snack. |
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Maize kernels can be used in place of sand in a sandboxlike enclosure for children's play. |
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This process makes use of the whole plant rather than simply using the kernels as in the production of fuel ethanol. |
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The kernels yield an oil, anacardic oil, used in the preparation of varnishes, typewriter rolls, paints and water-proofing paper. |
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Kilns were used for drying kernels of wheat or barley, not otherwise easy in the changeable, temperate climate. |
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For the hungry snacker, unpopped kernels at the bottom of a bag of microwavable popcorn are missed opportunities. |
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If you leave corn kernels out for too long, some will be unpoppable. |
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Maiz tostado takes longer to burst open than popcorn, so to prevent the kernels from burning, you have to keep tossing them, one hand securing the lid, until the noise stops. |
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When it is used as a grain crop, the dried kernels are used as feed. |
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Many other dishes consist of different kinds of cheeses, onions, bell peppers, cottage cheese, cornmeal, milk, seasonings, butter, eggs and fresh corn kernels. |
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The combine separates out the husk and the cob, keeping only the kernels. |
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Stickle rice is chalky kernels which are not translucent while jasmine and white rice are semi translucent kernels, meanwhile white rice has a bit opaquer than jasmine rice. |
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It's about a young man who tries to distill the true biography of his dying father by looking for the kernels of truth in the many tall tales he has told. |
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By hand or mechanical picker, the entire ear is harvested, which then requires a separate operation of a maize sheller to remove the kernels from the ear. |
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Most Maykopian out-crops are tied with phenomena of diapirism, which have caused the deposits to be in the surface or down along the kernels of numerous diapiric folds. |
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Arium tools are used worldwide to debug embedded applications, device drivers, boot loaders, OS kernels, and Linux loadable modules and applications. |
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Just as traditional but far easier to prepare is posole, the savory and hearty, rather soupy stew made from dried large white corn kernels simmered for hours. |
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The cut was probably made before charring, using a sharp tool to cut deep enough for the instrument to pry open one of the locules to get to one of three kernels. |
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