However, like many other root vegetables, the rampion lost popularity as the potato gained acceptance. |
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She agrees to give them as much rampion as they want if he will surrender their long-awaited baby to her. |
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Rural roadside verges and small, family-owned farms remain the only places left for species such as the crested cow-wheat, spiked rampion and man orchid to thrive. |
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Calstone and Cherhill Downs, Wiltshire Some 200 hectares of chalk grassland with a good population of juniper, and an array of wild flowers such as clustered bellflower and round-headed rampion. |
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The roots turned out to be a kind of rampion — a radishy-tasting taproot — which Germans call Rapunzel and my summer neighbors in Umbria, who crave them, too, call raponzolo. |
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There is, bergamot angelica, salad burnet, lemon verbena, sweet bay, sweet cicely, rampion, bistort, the old tried and tested pot marigold, hyssop and southernwood. |
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