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A treatise on the esculent funguses of England.
But then a magnificent assortment of Spanish cheeses proved even more tempting, particularly esculent with a glass of sweet wine.
"Eatable," said the giant creature between munches, "edible, esculent, comestible.
There is an esculent nillho which grows in the forest in the bottoms of the swampy ravines.
Their soil teems also with esculent roots and vegetables, which it is the aim of their culture to improve and vary to the utmost.
The remainder of the garden presented a well-selected assortment of esculent vegetables, in a praiseworthy state of advancement.
An order of mussels steamed in an esculent broth of lime, coconut milk and Thai spices made satisfying eating as did crab cake, chock full of crab meat.
The Rev. Dr Badham was more successful as a mycologist, writing a well-received Treatise on the esculent funguses of England, published in 1847.
Then consider what victual or esculent things there are, which grow speedily, and within the year; as parsnips, carrots, turnips, onions, radish, artichokes of Hierusalem, maize, and the like.
Dogs also should be taken to raise game, and to discover springs of water; and it has even been proposed to take pigs, for the sake of finding out esculent roots in the soil.
Reader presents the information and ideas in The Propitious Esculent building on the work of two important scholars: Redcliffe N. Salaman and William H. McNeill.
"I find I incorporate gneiss and coal and long-threaded moss and fruits and grains and esculent roots,/And am stucco'd with quadrupeds and birds all over," he writes, as though he were the subject of a strange Renaissance portrait.
The best plan seems to be to answer that I have entirely abandoned mere literature, and am contemplating a book on 'The Causes of Early Blight in the Potato,' a melancholy circumstance which threatens to deprive us of our chief esculent root.
I find I incorporate gneiss, coal, long-threaded moss, fruits, grains, esculent roots, And am stucco'd with quadrupeds and birds all over, And have distanced what is behind me for good reasons, But call any thing back again when I desire it.
She and her sister made watercolour paintings of some of the species they encountered and in 1847 a number of Anna Maria's illustrations were published as plates in A treatise on the esculent funguses of England by Charles David Badham.