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The country was quite flat, and the people cultivated manioc very extensively.
2
There were yams also and a sort of dumpling made of manioc.
3
Shinte sent us two large baskets of manioc and six dried fishes.
4
Katende gave us only a little meal and manioc, and a fowl.
5
Bereft of state pay, Kubonge ekes out a living growing manioc.
1
Three gari preparations separated by 2-week washout periods were consumed.
2
Children in this city have gari-themed fancy-dress parties.
3
I've gained so much, he says of the 20 years since he started working as a gari.
4
Our objective was to compare the effectiveness of biofortified gari to gari prepared with red palm oil.
5
It might include piping hot gari, the ubiquitous mashed-potato-like "dunking bread" made from ground cassava, the tropical root from which tapioca is produced.
1
The main dependence is the mandioc, or farina, as it is called.
2
Although they cultivated maize, and mandioc, and plaintains, they wanted every other supply.
3
We found rice, maize, millet, mandioc, plantains, oranges, pine-apples, and many other fruits.
4
The country abounded in excellent native fruits, and the mandioc furnished never-failing stores of bread.
5
The small mandioc tubers when boiled are very good and are used instead of potatoes.
1
There are two species, the sweet and bittercassava.
2
The experimental researches of Dr. Shier have led him to believe that the green bittercassava will give one-fifth its weight of starch.
3
The concentrated juice of the bittercassava, under the name of cassareep, forms the basis of the West India dish, "pepper pot."
1
The cassava, or tapiocaplant, reared its high, passion-flower leaves above the grass, and some sago-palms thrust aloft their thick-stemmed trunks.
Usage of mandioca in anglès
1
They had also brought us some mandioca-flour and a supply of fruits.
2
Like the Quichuas, they were agriculturalists-cultivatingmandioca, maize, calabashes, and potatoes.
3
Sugar-cane, mandioca, rice, beans, and Indian corn were raised with success.
4
The mandioca you have eaten in the shape of farina.
5
We also saw melons growing in abundance, as well as mandioca and Indian corn.
6
A field of mandioca, when ripe, looks something like a nursery of young plants.
7
The liquor served was chiefly a spirit distilled by the people themselves from mandioca cakes.
8
The most interesting subject connected with our trip was the cultivation and preparation of the mandioca.
9
The people occupy themselves the greater part of the year with their small plantations of mandioca.
10
The mandioca is called cassava in some countries.
11
He has a wife and children, and sometimes comes down to the roças to steal the mandioca.
12
A tract of forest had been fired, and this clearing planted with bananas, mandioca, sweet potatoes, etc.
13
The Aráras are one of those tribes which do not plant mandioca; and indeed have no settled habitations.
14
The most frequent cause of death is poisoning by drinking raw Tucupí, the juice of the mandioca root.
15
It is made by soaking mandioca cakes in water until fermentation takes place, and tastes like new beer.
16
The valleys and slopes are highly fertile and produce sugar, cotton, tobacco, Indian corn, rice, mandioca and Iruits.