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141 Sentences With "tubers"

How to use tubers in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tubers" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tubers". Mastering all the usages of "tubers" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Third, the hunter-gatherer bread we have does not only contain flour from wild barley, wheat and oats, but also from tubers, namely tubers from water plants (sedges).
Apparently, "all tubers are root crops, but not all root crops are tubers," and there are many ways to distinguish the part of a plant that grows underground.
The use of tools for hunting or digging for tubers.
But thanks to a dry summer, the tubers have come a cropper.
Women forage for plants, dig up tubers, and comb bushes for berries.
After all, I'm Polish, too—another ethnic group known for eating tubers.
The world produces over 400 million tons of these bulbous tubers each year.
It's like a home-pregnancy kit for tomatoes, or a strep test for tubers.
The photo showed oca and other tubers, not potatoes, from a restaurant in Peru.
"The First Potatoes Arrive in Europe" consists of 10 finely rendered tubers and a bowl.
When analyzed, the jug was found to contain broomcorn millet, barley, Job's tears and tubers.
The smell of frying tubers in fast-food lobbies is enough to turn my stomach.
Our protohuman ancestors ate ferns and tubers as vehicles for nutrients and calories, nothing more.
" Hardy and her team also suggested that early Paleolithic humans ate a wide range of carbs in the form of roots, starchy tubers, seeds, and barks—which doesn't sound terribly far from the Paleo Foundation's list of "seeds, roots and tubers, and fruits and berries.
Then there are the controversial foods, like oats, roots and tubers, fervently debated on Paleo message boards.
The Epipaleolithic period bread was made of domesticated cereals and club-rush tubers, according to the study.
The women traverse hilly terrain to collect wild berries and dig up tubers resembling fibrous sweet potatoes.
In the streets, peddlers pushing carts sell the hot, milky drink traditionally made from ground orchid tubers.
Wildman Brill mentioned that you can also eat the plant's tubers, which taste a little like turnips.
But what gets them there is technique: tossing the tubers in honey before roasting them intensifies their caramelization.
Fascinatingly, the Andean highlanders also acquired the ability to digest potatoes, a domesticated crop derived from wild tubers.
Consuming more roots and tubers was linked to a lower likelihood of excessive weight, the study also found.
Participants got less than 1% of their calories from legumes, eggs, fruit, vegetables, whole grains, tubers or nuts.
The crumbs were among more than 65,000 burnt fragments of plants such as tubers, legumes and wild grains.
Lifestyle: Naked mole rats eat roots and tubers, in addition to poop, according to the San Diego Zoo.
Bars flavored like Okinawan sweet potatoes, the starchy, deep purple Japanese tubers, are available in Kyushu and Okinawa.
They're also big fans of tubers, and a fruit called the "wolf apple," which is similar to a tomato.
You can choose any style of socks, though, from the no-show Hiders to the bright and fun Tubers.
Once hominins learned to use fire, he suggested, they roasted meat and starchy tubers they dug out of the ground.
The soft sand allows the sweet potatoes to expand, yielding large tubers the women can sell in towns, Nthianandham said.
We are seeing huge responses in blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, lettuce products, potatoes, general tubers… How do you measure your results?
This unique inheritance pattern means that potatoes are typically sterile, and must be propagated by harvesting them and replanting tubers.
Caused by a fungus-like pathogen, it first appears as black or brown lesions on leaves, stems, fruit or tubers.
Potatoes are fairly simple to grow, have both protein and carbs, and one other big advantage:There's something special about potato tubers.
Feel even fuller: Eat baked and boiled tubers skin-on to get more fiber for just 160 calories a pop. Eggs
Unlike underground tubers or legumes, grain grows tall and needs harvesting all at once, so officials can easily estimate annual yields.
"On any given day in a Hadza camp, there is almost always honey, a little meat and tubers," Dr. Pontzer said.
That means digging up hundreds of dahlia tubers to store in a 40-degree fridge and then replant next May. Annuals?
But with sweet potatoes, meant to stand in for tubers that early humans might have eaten, it was a different story.
People have been growing them for millennia on the altiplano, where the bizarre tubers' funk and color enliven the bleak terrain.
Their daily diet is rich in roughage — tubers, berries, baobab fruits — and the Hadza people don't eat any ultra-processed foods.
The smooth tubers had a satisfying citrus note cutting usefully across the sticky sweetness of the slightly charred white gelatin sugar nuggets.
And the ingredients they discovered are as eclectic as any trendy brewpub's: broomcorn millet, tubers and a grain known as Job's tears.
According to the scientists, the 5,000-year-old brew contained broomcorn millet, barley, Job's tears, and tubers like yams, to add sweetness.
Dr. Stich and his team are developing a technique called genomic prediction to fast-track the identification of tubers with desirable traits.
Made from orchid tubers, the drink is a winter staple in Turkey, but finding it in the United States can prove difficult.
Conquistadors took the tubers and ignored the ways the plants and their diseases had been managed in complex crop rotations for centuries.
"This beer recipe indicates a mix of Chinese and Western traditions: barley from the West, millet, Job's tears, tubers from China," Wang said.
Luckily, there's a simple solution to this age-old dilemma, and it'll save you from having to peel a bunch of tubers, too.
The starch in those overcooked tubers helps the dressing cling to the potato chunks, instead of falling off like so many vinaigrettes can.
Fuling Journal FULING, China — Tree-carpeted mountains rise high in this sleepy Yangtze River district, best known for its crunchy pickled mustard tubers.
PotatoesPhoto: Scott Bauer/USDA ARSScientists are trying to revolutionize potatoes and, in the process, cure the tubers' depression, the result of generations of inbreeding.
Meat and chicken, which in 2015 were the fourth- and fifth-most purchased grocery products, respectively, were overtaken in 953 by vegetables and tubers.
The answer lies in history, back when we dug in the dirt for starchy tubers, foraged for sweet berries and gorged on fatty fish.
"V-tubers in general build quite the fan base but being a cam girl version really builds a strong following for her," he said.
The tubers, which included snake gourd root, contribute starch and sugars for fermentation and also add a sweet flavor to the beer, they wrote.
There is no evidence, he said, that hominins actually smashed tubers to eat them, nor do any living hunter-gatherers engage in the practice.
One workaround is to process the tubers into potato flour, which is then mixed with wheat flour to make steamed bread, noodles or cakes.
One workaround is to process the tubers into potato flour, which is then mixed with wheat flour to make steamed bread, noodles and cakes.
He'd sliced the tubers thin and soaked the mushrooms in fresh maple sap, then stacked them in more than a dozen fine alternating layers.
Salvinia has a predator: a weevil that feeds voraciously upon its leaves and tubers and which, we learn, may be beginning to turn the tide.
The statistics office said the highest increases were recorded in potatoes, yam and other tubers, as well as bread and cereals, plus oil and fats.
That diet consists primarily of yams, sweet potatoes, and taro (all part of a group known as tubers), local fruits (namely coconut), fish, and vegetables.
Chipping occurs when animals have a diet of hard foods like nuts or grit-covered foods dug up from the ground, like roots and tubers.
"We found pieces of soft plant tissue typically found in edible roots or tubers, hinting at a plant food component in peoples' diet," Pryor said.
His team has used the technique to successfully predict tubers' susceptibility to potato blight, as well as their starch content, yield and time to maturity.
During the rest of the three-hour tour, neophyte foragers collected bags full of greens, tubers, and flowers for eating or planting later at home.
When the researchers analyzed starch grains found inside the artifacts, they found evidence of broomcorn millets, barley, a type of grain called Job's tears, and tubers.
But the late blight was devouring the remaining tubers underground, and when farmers dug up the rest of the crop, they found only a smelly mush.
I had a late lunch of a few high-fibre tubers dug up with a sharp stick by the female foragers and tossed on the fire.
Front Burner It's white truffle season, and the treasured tubers, which can fetch up to $150 an ounce, are perfuming plates of pasta in many restaurants.
Dr. Zink and her adviser at Harvard, Daniel E. Lieberman, wondered if stone tools helped hominins digest meat and starchy tubers long before cooking was invented.
The original irrigation builders spent generations maintaining shallow trenches off of rivers that would restore groundwater and quench crops like piñon trees, edible grass, and tubers.
Getting them is not easy, Dr. Pontzer said: The women use sticks to dig up the tubers, in some cases while carrying infants on their backs.
"That's so cute," said Ms. Olsen, before learning that many old-school truffle hunters are missing fingers from having wrested the tubers away from the pigs.
Starch grain analysis, which is a relatively novel method, was key to finding evidence of potatoes because the tubers do not preserve well, Dr. Aldenderfer said.
They were also able to pin down the recipe of that beer to an unlikely, but delicious-sounding, combination of broomcorn millet, barley, Job's tears, and tubers.
Now some have realised that the spongy vegetation can be worth more than the tubers, which sometimes cost more to grow than they fetch in the market.
The pigs root in search of tubers and other buried delights, and can make it look like a mechanized tiller guided by a phantom got loose overnight.
The group, who were taught how to run their own businesses by TechnoServe, an American non-profit, banded together to borrow money to grow high-quality tubers.
And even if early hominins did smash uncooked tubers, Dr. Wrangham said, he doubts that they got enough nutrition from them to keep a modern human healthy.
She's lighthearted and fun when she focuses on a single scene, such as the Olympic ring inner tubers, or animating an enthusiastic foodie humping a giant taco.
Sahlab (also known as salep), is a sparkly white powder ground from the root tubers of the Mediterranean Orchis italica (inexplicably known as "the naked man orchid").
But in the dry season, they also dig for tubers and eat lots of meat, because it is easier to hunt for animals on a parched landscape.
Not only were they used for hunting, but also the processing of animal skins, scraping and cutting plants, scraping minerals and digging of edible tubers, Hershkovitz said.
The piece is made up of three screens projecting the tubers in different states of decay, as tons of the actual starch lay on the gallery floor.
A move toward crunching starchy tubers seems to have started more than 2 million years ago, when a changing climate turned African jungles to savannas and mixed woods.
Catholic priest and rights activist John Jonga, blamed the crisis on a lack of vaccinations and a switch from more nutritious tubers to rice as a staple food.
And those mutant potatoes, with their amputee stumps and flipperlike appendages: they're abject emissaries from the underworld, sightless tubers waiting to sprout eyes in the root-cellar dark.
Despite my Irish first name, heritage, and citizenship (obtained here in the US, years ago), to me, tubers are tantamount to poison—a poison most other people relish.
MysteryPotato offers a variety of tubers—from workaday spuds to sweet potatoes, and even a whole bag of Russets—each personalized with a message written in indelible ink.
In time, bars opened, eventually more than 20, some adding crudely cobbled-together swings, slides and zip lines, entertainment to attract tubers and keep them occupied between drinks.
For most of their lives, the world's super-agers have nourished their bodies with whole, plant-based foods, such as leafy vegetables, tubers, nuts, beans and whole grains.
The flotation technique revealed that roots and tubers were probably cooked at the site, and that pine and spruce were a major source of firewood for these humans.
The report said the largest share of daily calories, 35 percent, should come from whole grains, including rice, wheat and corn, and starchy tubers like potatoes and cassava.
Catholic priest and rights activist John Jonga blamed the crisis on a lack of vaccinations and a switch from more nutritious tubers to rice as a staple food.
Only once it has dried is it ready to be dissolved in water with salt, after which it is ready to eat with potatoes and other highland tubers.
The discovery means that ancient hunter-gatherers were using the wild ancestors of domesticated cereals, such as wild einkorn and club-rush tubers, to make flatbread-like food products.
It's rude to play with your food at the Thanksgiving dinner table, but exceptions can be made if you're sculpting newly announced cyberpunk pickup trucks out of your tubers.
The hunter-gatherers from that time who were most adept at following game or finding tubers won the baby-making lottery and passed along their genes to us, their descendants.
And each sock shape brings its own function: Hiders are the perfect pair of no-show socks, Quarters sit right above the ankle, and Tubers resemble the classic tube sock.
You have to keep your eye on them at all times as you creep through the underbrush knocking apples to the ground and digging up tubers for your children to eat.
If cooking, at least of starches, can alter the ecology of the gut, then have humans been shaping our microbiomes ever since we learned to put prehistoric tubers in the fire?
"Salsa pa' Tu Lechón" trumpets the basics — manicongo and lerenes (both peanut-shaped tubers served with traditional Dominican dishes) and keeping up with your dancing partner's fast-paced twists and turns.
This great day in the snow turns into a chaotic scene when a group of snow tubers causes a pileup by sitting on their tubes while being carried on a conveyor belt.
About 220 percent of cereal harvests, 863 to 286 percent of tubers, fruits and vegetables, 2000 percent of oilseeds, meat and milk, and 237 percent of fish, are lost, the FAO said.
Secondly, Einat Admony—chef and owner of Taim Falafel, Balaboosta, and Bar Bolonat in NYC—shares her seasonally spectacular Sunchoke Latkes, which integrate the tasty sunflower tubers also known as Jerusalem artichokes.
In addition to tossing the sweet potatoes in a mixture of triple cream brie and honey, the tubers are dressed with a heavy pinch of chili flakes and some chives for garnish.
Make a mixture of gochujang and soy and dark molasses, or of miso and butter, and drizzle it over the cooked tubers, then shower them in sliced jalapeño, chopped scallion and cilantro.
Bell pepper, garlic, sweet peppers, cilantro, celery, and vinegar flavor the base, while the traditional beef is replaced with tubers and root vegetables — kabocha squash, cassava, plantains, yams, and yellow and white eddoe.
"The rise in the index was caused by increases in prices of bread and cereals, meat, fish, oils and fats, coffee, tea and cocoa, potatoes yam and other tubers and vegetables," the report said.
For many years, the scientists had been studying and tagging along on hunts with the Hadza, a tribe in Tanzania that lives by subsistence hunting and foraging for berries, honey, baobab fruit and tubers.
"This rise in the food index was caused by increases in prices of bread and cereals, meat, oils and fats, potatoes, yam and other tubers and fish," the statistics office said in its report.
The bread's ingredients were species of wheat and barley growing wild in the region (which was at that time fertile, though it is now desert), and crushed tubers from Bolboschoenus glaucus, a type of papyrus.
Some had the classic testicular form—the Greek name for the flower, ὄρχις (órkhis), means testicle, because the twin tubers of certain species bring that part of the anatomy to mind—but others were pointed.
Based on their experiments, Dr. Zink and Dr. Lieberman concluded that, long before the invention of cooking, stone tools could have made it easier for hominins to eat raw meat and tubers, conserving precious energy.
Nigel walked us through the woods to manioc fields, where we spoke to an older farming couple — the man's calf swollen and black from a snake bite — and plucked a few tubers from the ground.
Beneath them are the soldiers and defenders of the realm, the biggest animals around, and at the bottom are the workers who dig tunnels with their teeth or search for tubers, their main food source.
"This rise in the food index was caused by increases in prices of meat, oils and fats, bread and cereals, potatoes, ham and other tubers, fish and vegetables," the statistics office said in its report.
But looking at the long-term picture, even if the Alba's price fluctuates from time to time at Mother Nature's whim, the fate of black truffles, the next-most valuable tubers, is in serious jeopardy.
Beyond their superficial sex appeal, Hasselback-ing the tubers adds a fun textural element—you get the crispiness of French fries on the top, with the creaminess of a proper baked potato on the inside.
But bad weather has also caused wheat yields to fall in Europe this year, and previous reductions in the acreage devoted to growing potatoes mean there were fewer tubers to go round in the first place.
The findings show losses of one in four roots, tubers and oil-bearing crops, such as cassava and potatoes, and more than one in five fruits and vegetables, but less than 10% in cereals and pulses.
The findings show losses of one in four roots, tubers and oil-bearing crops, such as cassava and potatoes, and more than one in five fruits and vegetables, but less than 10% in cereals and pulses.
In some of their past research, these scientists had shown that members of the Hadza tribe in Tanzania are quite physically active, devoting several hours a day to activities like following game or tugging up tubers.
If microbiomes can retool themselves on little notice to handle changes in diet, they may have helped early humans cope with lean days where tubers were the only foods or times when only meat was on the menu.
Among the billions of tons of food lost per year, the largest percentage is in vital, nutrient-rich foods like fruits and vegetables and roots and tubers (such as potatoes and carrots), each seeing about 45 percent wasted annually.
The plan to allow foreigners to invest in sectors such as cleaning of tubers, fabric printing, weaving, internet cafes and internet-based retail trade has been scrapped, Susiwijono, the secretary for the coordinating ministry of economic affairs, told a news conference.
Truffle hunting, as it's been practiced for centuries, involves walking a scent-trained animal, like a pig or a dog, into an area known to have wild truffles and waiting as they sniff out the pricey tubers one by one.
Tests of the yellow residue show the presence of barley, broomcorn millet, tubers and Job's tears (also known as Chinese pearl barley or coix seed), which were fermented together to make what probably would have been a sweet and sour kind of brew.
You can turn one of these deceptively boring tubers into an entire meal, just by adding a little butter (or maybe a lot of butter—hey, we're not the butter police), a touch of pungent curry powder, or a few fresh herbs.
Korean sweet potatoes have more of a red or purple-ish skin with white insides, as opposed to the all-orange tubers you might find more commonly at the supermarket, but they taste just as sweet and homey in this classic holiday dish.
I don't remember this myself, but DEEDEE Sharp had a 33 hit called "Mashed Potato Time": I know that none of you will be at all shocked to learn that there was an actual dance that went with this song about mashed tubers.
A couple of pounds of Idaho potatoes can go a long way in the cooler months, and what better way to show your respect to these starchy tubers than by throwing them in the oven with a bit of oil and salt?
Closer to his own life, in the remote litter of mud huts on Lake Victoria in Kenya where he had grown up one of 14 children, villagers had initially rejected the cassava cuttings his father had introduced, thinking the unknown tubers would breed demons.
This recipe mixes Chinese and Western traditions, using barley from the West and millet, Job's tears, and tubers from China, Jiajing Wang, lead author of the study Ph.D student in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures at Stanford, told Business Insider in an email.
Grateful potato recipients have posted their gifts on social media (it's the only way to find out who loves you enough to send you such a gift), allowing would-be potato givers to get some inspiration for the message they'd like to have inscribed on their tubers.
Ms. Kusama, who was born in Japan in 2500, made her first Infinity Mirror room, "Phalli's Field," in New York in 21966, filling the 22007-square-foot floor of a mirrored space with hundreds of her signature stuffed phalli, or tubers, covered in red-on-white polka-dot fabric.
The varieties of these root-tubers that were popular in Uganda, his native land, and other parts of Africa in the mid-1980s, when he began his studies, are deficient in vitamin A. A lack of this vitamin damages children's eyesight and opens them to infection by such things as measles.
The Trino socks are available in three styles, and each is available in six colors, which include light blue, pink, and chartreuse: Hiders ($12): Low-cut, no show Quarters ($14): Above-the-ankle Tubers ($16): Classic crew For Allbirds, these simple socks represent just the beginning of what we think can eventually become a household apparel name.
As you may have gleaned from Instagram, Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors, a major retrospective of the Japanese artist, has come to town, and it centers on Kusama's most popular but least accessible constructions: her immersive mirror rooms, filled with everything from soft, spotted phallic tubers ("Phalli's Field") to plump, polka-dotted pumpkins ("Infinity Mirrored Room — All the Eternal Love I Have for the Pumpkins") that all appear to extend infinitely into distant darkness.

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