A simple filter cleans and circulates the water while chayote plants, ginger, and duckweed add oxygen and food. |
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The mirliton turned out to be the Louisiana name for chayote, a light-green ridged fruit you may have seen in ethnic grocery stores. |
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The chilled potato and egg casserole, black bean and chorizo salad and pleasantly sharp chayote were all very good. |
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A bowl of springy udon noodles with slivers of chayote in sesame sauce required especial dexterity with chopsticks but was worth every splash. |
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Nestling in a green setting, this pond is beautifully surrounded by a dense growth of chayote. |
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This is the first year that García has planted chayote, and, to his delight, it thrived. |
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The delegation also suggested that Codex specifies MRLs for pesticide sused on banana, chayote and tiquisque. |
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To make it onto Northern market shelves, chayote must be light green, smooth to the touch, about 15 cm long and 450 grams in weight, and without blemishes. |
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The notoriously prolific zucchini is perhaps the best-known summer squash, but the group also includes chayote, yellow crookneck and straightneck squash, as well as pattypans. |
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One of the things very few could identify was a chayote or christophine, also known as a chow-chow, or Sechium edule – it's a pear-shaped cucurbit from South America. |
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A housewife wandering through its market stalls could find Italian olives, Seville oranges, Jamaican sugarcane, and Mexican chayote, all from local orchards and farms. |
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After this exciting adventure, we climb back into our vehicles and enter the Valley of Ujarrás, an farming area famous for its chayote, vegetables and sugar cane. |
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Choose plenty of vegetables raw, steamed or stir fried such as Bok choy, chayote, cucumber, eggplant, daikon, spinach, carrots, cauliflower, cabbage, and bitter melon. |
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Of the others, two were revisions and seven were new drafts: Agaricus, Cardon, Chayote, Coriander, Cowpea, Taro and Yam. |
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