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carum การใช้

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  • Cumin is sometimes confused with caraway ( " Carum carvi " ), another umbelliferous spice.
  • But a favorite of flower arrangers is caraway ( Carum carvi ), which is very likely what you saw.
  • It is also found in the essential oil of black caraway ( " Carum bulbocastanum " ) fruits and " Carum nigrum ".
  • It is also found in the essential oil of black caraway ( " Carum bulbocastanum " ) fruits and " Carum nigrum ".
  • This highly oxygenated phenylpropanoid, previously reported in a few " Carum " species, is structurally and biogenetically related to myristicin, apiole and dillapiole.
  • ""'Carum " "'is a genus of about 20 species of flowering plants in the family Apiaceae, native to temperate regions of the Old World.
  • The " gachas murcianas " of the Murcia region are a variation of the " gachas manchegas " spiked with caraway " ( Carum carvi ) ", black pepper and cloves.
  • Carvone is found naturally in many essential oils, but is most abundant in the oils from seeds of caraway ( " Carum carvi " ), spearmint ( " Mentha spicata " ), and dill.
  • He cited the Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology to show how the primary meaning includes conveyance in a vehicle : the Latin carum means " car " and " cart, " and since 1896 we have used car to mean " automobile ."
  • "' Hauskyjza "'( German " Hausk鋝e " )-a foodstuff made of cottage cheese, carum and other ingredients, which are mixed, put aside for a few days to acquire the characteristic sharp flavor and tacky consistency, and then warmed and fried.
  • In 2005, it was registered on a " List of Traditional Products " ( Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development as " Ser domowy sma | ony z kminkiem, z czosnkiem, bez przypraw " ( " home-made fried cheese with carum, with garlic, without spices " ).
  • The Latin equivalents of terms equating to " British Isles " started to be used by mapmakers from the mid-16th century onwards; Sebastian M黱ster in " Geographia Universalis " ( a 1550 reissue of Ptolemy's " Geography " ) uses the heading " De insulis Britannicis, Albione, qu?est Anglia, & Hibernia, & de cuiutatibus carum in genere ."
  • Caraway has been called by many names in different regions, with names deriving from the Latin " cuminum " ( cumin ), the Greek " karon " ( again, cumin ), which was adapted into Latin as " carum " ( now meaning caraway ), and the Sanskrit " karavi ", sometimes translated as " caraway ", but other times understood to mean " fennel ".