Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
In fact that candlenut tree was probably brought to the island by humans.
In his second year of school, Sidik fell from a candlenut tree and lost consciousness.
The flavor, however, is quite different, as the candlenut is much more bitter.
The state tree is the candlenut, also called kukui.
Or a candlenut was thrown into the hole, so that a tree would grow at that place.
Meanwhile candlenut oil and orange blossom wax restore the skin's protective layer.
He was felling a tall candlenut tree, and each resounding stroke bit deep into the soft wood.
The second most important component of the crows' diet is the candlenut itself; the birds break these by dropping them onto hard surfaces.
Each day, a paste (made from candlenut tree) is smeared on the child's head, to soften the skin and to prevent binding rash.
Candlenut Kitchen is a restaurant in Singapore serving Peranakan cuisine.
The college was criticised in May 2011 when it severely pruned and seriously damaged a protected candlenut tree on campus.
The flare of a candlenut made a dim light in the house, and I saw Christian standing over me, with his sweetheart at his side.
Coconut milk, salt, and spices such as ground candlenut and coriander are often mixed within the flour batter.
The seed is very high in flammable oils, like a candlenut, so it is able to be burnt as an illuminant.
Moluccan Candlenut is often used in Indonesian cooking but the nuts are usually served with ample supplies of other vegetables.
Dead wood of candlenut is eaten by a larva of a coleoptera called 'Agrionome fairmairei'.
Pu'u Kukui translates into "candlenut hill".
Common spices include turmeric, coriander, candlenut, lemongrass, garlic, shallot and pepper cooked in coconut milk.
Kemiri (candlenut)
Kukui (candlenut)
We kept a supply of candlenut tapers ready for lighting on a shelf, along with a flint and steel and a box of tinder.
The candlenut, or kukui (Aleurites moluccanus)
Rabendary Island comprised about a hundred acres, including a thirty-acre forest of mena, blackwood, candlenut, semprissima.
Common soto spices include shallots, garlic, turmeric, galangal, ginger, coriander, salt, candlenut and pepper.
It is sliced across the backbone as fillet, then served with traditional condiments such as sea salt, candlenut, seaweed, and limu.
Candleberry tree is a common name for several plants and may refer to:
Common names include bayberry, bay-rum tree, candleberry, sweet gale, and wax-myrtle.
To contact Candleberry Ltd. please fill-in the form below, or use the contact email addresses at the foot of this page.
The Candleberry Creek Company in Cheona, Ill., stopped withholding in 1998.
A road to the beach was bulldozed and the Candleberry Shelter was built prior to the opening of Day Camp in 1960.
Candlenut From the candleberry tree, these nuts look like macadamia nuts and tase like brazil nuts.
Its common names include southern wax myrtle, southern bayberry, candleberry, bayberry tree, and tallow shrub.
Common names include scentless bayberry, odorless bayberry, odorless wax-myrtle, waxberry, candleberry, and waxtree.
The bridegroom's father, who retired as a computer services manager at the Mobil Oil Corporation in Fairfax, Va., owns the Candleberry Inn in Brewster.
Triadica sebifera, also known as Sapium sebiferum, is commonly known as the Chinese tallow, Chinese tallowtree, Florida aspen, chicken tree, gray popcorn tree, and candleberry tree.
Aleurites moluccanus (or moluccana), the candlenut, is a flowering tree in the spurge family, Euphorbiaceae, also known as candleberry, Indian walnut, kemiri, varnish tree, nuez de la India, buah keras or kukui nut tree.
Bartram had insisted that this differed from the candleberry,Myrica cerifera, while Miller had found other authors ranging it with the Liquidambar, 'so I shall be much obliged to you, if you can send me a perfect specimen, that I may determine its proper genus.'
Oil from kukui (Aleurites moluccana) nuts coats either the course or the runners to provide lubrication.
Euphorbiaceae (e.g. Aleurites moluccana, Macaranga spp.)
The mountains also favour a number of important cash crops such as tamarind, coconuts, coffee, cloves, cocoa, cashew nuts, candlenuts (Aleurites moluccana), vanilla, almonds and tobacco.
Other names for this species include Japanese lacquer tree, Japanese Varnish Tree and Japanese Sumac (Note: the term "varnish tree" is also occasionally applied to the Candlenut, Aleurites moluccana, a southeast Asian tree unrelated to Toxicodendron).