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bear garlic
noun
A wild plant related to chives; ramsons, Allium ursinum
Exact(2)
Also known as ramsons, bear garlic and stinking jenny, its pungent allium scent will lead you to it before you see it.
Most authorities, including the Department of Agriculture, consider "ramp" a shortened form of "ramson," which is an old name for the European counterpart of the ramp, Allium ursinum or bear garlic.
Similar(58)
(Sorrel, celery leaf, pea shoots, red amaranth, valerian, broom, sesame powder and bear's garlic were among those used in the month of May).
The light and flavorful spring menu included a smoked egg in chicken bouillon doused with Lapsang souchong tea, potato purée and chicken rillettes; grilled maigre, or croaker, threaded with bear's garlic and garnished with pickled onions; and saddle of lamb with bulgur and wasabi yogurt.
In factories, too, British workers are reported to have refused to work with Asian immigrants "because they could not bear the smell of garlic".
I like to think that I'm broad-minded and open and welcoming, and that my hand-carved Balinese animal heads and my gilded pier mirror and my portrait gallery of paintings and my Moroccan kilims and my collection of dried fruit and dried garlic "characters" bear this out.
Both versions of the new diagnostic method bear great potential for their implementation in virus-free certification schemes in garlic, a vegetatively propagated crop for which such a certification is critical for a high-quality product.
A side dish of garlic and rosemary roast potatoes is just a crashing, puritanical bore.
Still on the restaurant's menu is the dish that bears his name: salmone alla Wixell, baked in parchment with fresh tomatoes, black olives, pesto, garlic and white wine.
and garlic.
And garlic.
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