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Home is where the 'proper' equipment is

Home cooking for you in Fennimore, Wisconsin.

Here is our little 1 week old Ella Grace! Finally got tthe chance to set up some shots today and really happy with the results - not least of all because she slept straight through the shoot without weeing everywhere!

Home Depot Credit Card Reader, 9/2/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

The Money Pit provides Home Improvement tips and suggestions to help you make your House a Home. Find our home improvements tips here www.moneypit.com

Whale Watch Platform

This is a Glass Slide showing the village homes in whitley and a group of young girls.

The slide is from some time between the late 19th and early 20th century. It was taken by the Tynemouth photographer M. Auty.

The slide would have been viewed through a Magic Lantern, an early type of image projector.

 

This image is part of the Tyne & Wear archives & museums set South Shields Art Gallery Social History collection.

 

(Copyright) We're happy for you to share this digital image within the spirit of The Commons. Please cite 'Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums' when reusing. Certain restrictions on high quality reproductions and commercial use of the original physical version apply though; if you're unsure please email adam.bell@twmuseums.org.uk

Another pic of my home computer. The desk is never really this clean. It is usually filled with papers but you know I had to clean it up for you all.

Recently finished homes near Steveston Village in Richmond.

Pic: Samantha Pynn Pure Design

 

Does anybody have the Malm dressers in white? Are they matte? I'm a little concerned about their defenses against a little boy.

Homer Eagle. Looking through my archives and came up with a couple fairly good ones. Here are more from last spring:

www.akphotograph.com/Alaska Blog/wp-admin/edit.php?tag=photographing-eagles

This home plate is really special for me. This is the plate I touched for my first career score! And this is the plate where I broke my foot on while scoring my first run in Baseball. So, no it is not just a picture.

Balcony gardening. Nice weather again. Hicima leaves are inedible.

ONLY the root portion of jicama is edible. The leaves, flowers and vines of the plant contain rotenone, a natural insecticide designed to protect the plant from predators. Eating any of these parts of the plant can cause a toxic reaction.

 

Pachyrhizus erosus, commonly known as jícama (/ˈhɪkəmə/ or /dʒɪˈkɑːmə/;[1] Spanish jícama [ˈxikama] (About this soundlisten); from Nahuatl xīcamatl, [ʃiːˈkamatɬ]), Mexican yam bean, or Mexican turnip, is the name of a native Mexican vine, although the name most commonly refers to the plant's edible tuberous root. Jícama is a species in the genus Pachyrhizus in the bean family (Fabaceae). Plants in this genus are commonly referred to as yam bean, although the term "yam bean" can be another name for jícama. The other major species of yam beans are also indigenous within the Americas. Pachyrhizus tuberosus[2] and Pachyrhizus ahipa are the other two cultivated species. The naming of this group of edible plants seems confused, with much overlap of similar or the same common names.

 

Pachyrhizus erosus

 

Pachyrhizus erosus Blanco2.249.png

Scientific classification:

Kingdom: (unranked):

Angiosperms: (unranked):

Eudicots: (unranked):

Rosids

Order: Fabales

Family: Fabaceae

Genus: Pachyrhizus

Species: P. erosus

Binomial name: Pachyrhizus erosus

(L.) Urb.

Flowers, either blue or white, and pods similar to lima beans, are produced on fully developed plants. Several species of jicama occur, but the one found in many markets is P. erosus. The two cultivated forms of P. erosus are jicama de aguaand jicama de leche, both named for the consistency of their juice. The leche form has an elongated root and milky juice, while the aguaform has a top-shaped to oblate root and a more watery, translucent juice, and is the preferred form for market.[3][4]

 

Botany:

 

Other names for jicama include Mexican potato, ahipa, saa got, Chinese potato, and sweet turnip. In Ecuador and Peru, the name jicama is used for the unrelated yacón or Peruvian ground apple, a plant of the sunflower family whose tubers are also used as food.[4]

  

Fresh jícama for sale at a farmers' market

The jícama vine can reach a height of 4–5 m given suitable support. Its root can attain lengths up to 2 m and weigh up to 20 kg. The heaviest jícama root ever recorded weighed 23 kg and was found in 2010 in the Philippines (where they are called singkamas).[5] Jicama is frost-tender and requires 9 months without frost for a good harvest of large tubers or to grow it commercially. It is worth growing in cooler areas that have at least 5 months without frost, as it will still produce tubers, but they will be smaller. Warm, temperate areas with at least 5 months without frost can start seed 8 to 10 weeks before the last spring frost. Bottom heat is recommended, as the seeds require warm temperatures to germinate, so the pots will need to be kept in a warm place. Jicama is unsuitable for areas with a short growing season unless cultured in a greenhouse. Growers in tropical areas can sow seed at any time of the year. Those in subtropical areas should sow seed once the soil has warmed in the spring.[6]

 

History:

 

The jicama originated in Mexico and central America.[7] It has been found at archaeological sites in Peru dating to 3000 BC.[7] In the 17th century, the jicama was introduced to Asia by the Spanish.[7]

 

In cooking:

 

Diced fresh jícama, seasoned with Tajín chili powder

The root's exterior is yellow and papery, while its inside is creamy white with a crisp texture that resembles raw potato or pear. The flavor is sweet and starchy, reminiscent of some apples or raw green beans, and it is usually eaten raw, sometimes with salt, lemon, or lime juice, alguashte, and chili powder. It is also cooked in soups and stir-fried dishes. Jícama is often paired with chilli powder, cilantro, ginger, lemon, lime, orange, red onion, salsa, sesame oil, grilled fish, and soy sauce.[8] It can be cut into thin wedges and dipped in salsa. In Mexico, it is popular in salads, fresh fruit combinations, fruit bars, soups, and other cooked dishes. In contrast to the root, the remainder of the jícama plant is very poisonous; the seeds contain the toxin rotenone, which is used to poison insects and fish.[9] The exterior of the seed pods are edible and can be used in cooking, for example the Ilocano dish “Bunga ng singkamas” where it is cooked in a stew as the main ingredient.

 

Spread to Asia:

 

Jícama

Yambean (jicama), raw

Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)

Energy: 159 kJ (38 kcal)

Carbohydrates: 8.82 g

Sugars: 1.8 g

Dietary fiber: 4.9 g

Fat: 0.09 g

Protein: 0.72 g

Vitamins: Quantity%DV†.

Thiamine (B1): 2%0.02 mg

Riboflavin (B2): 2%0.029 mg

Niacin (B3): 1%0.2 mg

Pantothenic acid (B5): 3%0.135 mg

Vitamin B6: 3%0.042 mg

Folate (B9): 3%12 μg

Choline: 3%13.6 mg

Vitamin C: 24%20.2 mg

Minerals: Quantity%DV†

Calcium: 1%12 mg

Iron: 5%0.6 mg

Magnesium: 3%12 mg

Manganese: 3%0.06 mg

Phosphorus: 3%18 mg

Potassium: 3%150 mg

Sodium: 0%4 mg

Zinc: 2%0.16 mg

 

Link to USDA Database entry

 

Units:

 

μg = micrograms • mg = milligrams

IU = International units

†Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.

 

Source: USDA Food Data Central

 

Spaniards spread cultivation of jícama from Mexico to the Philippines (where it is known as singkamas, from Nahuatl xicamatl),[10] from there it went to China and other parts of Southeast Asia, where notable uses of raw jícama include popiah, bola-bola (meatballs) and fresh lumpia in the Philippines, and salads in Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia such as yusheng and rojak.

 

In the Philippines, jícama is usually eaten fresh with condiments such as rice vinegar and sprinkled with salt, or with bagoong (shrimp paste). In Malay, it is known by the name ubi sengkuang. In Indonesia, jícama is known as bengkuang. This root crop is also known by people in Sumatra and Java,[citation needed] and eaten at fresh fruit bars or mixed in the rojak (a kind of spicy fruit salad). Padang, a city in West Sumatra, is called "the city of bengkuang". Local people might have thought that this jícama is the "indigenous crop" of Padang. The crop has been grown everywhere in this city and it has become a part of their culture.[11]

 

It is known by its Chinese name bang kuang to the ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia. In Mandarin Chinese, it is known as dòushǔ (豆薯; lit. ‘bean potato’) or liáng shǔ (涼薯), as sa1 got (沙葛, same as "turnip") in Yue Chinese/Cantonese, and as mang-guang (芒光) in Teochew, where the word is borrowed from the Malay, and as dìguā (地瓜) in Guizhou province and several neighboring provinces of China, the latter term being shared with sweet potatoes. Jícama has become popular in Vietnamese food as an ingredient in pie, where it is called cây củ đậu (in northern Vietnam) or củ sắn or sắn nước (in southern Vietnam).

 

In Myanmar, it is called စိမ်းစားဥ (sane-saar-u). Its Thai name is มันแกว (man kaeo).[12] In Cambodia, it is known as ដំឡូងរលួស /dɑmlɔoŋ rəluəh/ or under its Chinese name as ប៉ិកួៈ ~ ប៉ិគក់ /peʔkŭəʔ/.[13]In Bengali, it is known as shankhalu (শাঁখ আলু), literally translating to "conch (shankha, শাঁখ) potato (alu, আলু)" for its shape, size, and colour. In Hindi, it is known as mishrikand (मिश्रीकंद). It is eaten during fast (उपवास) in Bihar (India) and is known as kesaur (केसौर). In Odia, it is known as (ଶଙ୍ଖ ସାରୁ) shankha saru. In Laos, it is called man phao (ມັນເພົາ),[14]smaller and tastes a little sweeter than the Mexican type. It is used as a snack by peeling off the outer layer of the skin, then cutting into bite sizes for eating like an apple or a pear.

 

Its formal Japanese common name is kuzu-imo (葛芋, lit. =‘kudzu vine’+ ‘tuber’), though it may be referred to as benkowan (ベンコワン) or bankuan (バンクアン) after the Indonesian name bengkuang or as hikama (ヒカマ) as in the Mexican name.[15]

 

Nutrition:

 

Jícama is high in carbohydrates in the form of dietary fiber (notably inulin).[16] It is composed of 86–90% water; it contains only trace amounts of protein and lipids. Its sweet flavor comes from the oligofructose inulin (also called fructo-oligosaccharide), which is a prebiotic. Jícama is very low in saturated fat and sodium. It is also a good source of vitamin C.[17]

 

Storage:

 

Learn more:

This section does not cite any sources. (July 2017)

Jícama should be stored dry, between 12 and 16 °C (53 and 60 °F). As colder temperatures will damage the roots, whole unpeeled jicama root should not be refrigerated. A fresh root stored at an appropriate temperature will keep for a month or two.

 

References:

 

^ Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014. S.v. "Jicama." Retrieved July 18, 2017 from www.thefreedictionary.com/jicama

^ Pachyrhizus tuberosus

^ Johnson, Hunter. "Extension Vegetable Specialist". UC-Davis.

^ a b "Globalization of Foods-Jicama". Global Bhasin. Archived from the original on 11 January 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2013.

^ 'Heaviest' Singkamas Found in Ilocos

^ "Jicama Growing Information". Green Harvest. Retrieved 31 July 2013.

^ a b c Sanderson, Helen (2005). Prance, Ghillean; Nesbitt, Mark (eds.). The Cultural History of Plants. Routledge. p. 67. ISBN 0415927463.

^ Green, Aliza (2004). Field Guide to Produce. Quirk Books. p. 194. ISBN 1-931686-80-7.

^ Duke, James A. (1992). "Handbook of phytochemical constituents of GRAS herbs and other economic plants". Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases. CRC Press. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved June 25, 2010.

^ "Singkamas". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2 January 2015.

^ "What is Jicama?". Innovateus. Retrieved 30 July 2013.

^ So Sethaputra, New Model Thai-English Dictionary, Bangkok: Thai Watana Panich, 1965, p. 366.

^ Pauline Dy Phon, វចនានុក្រមរុក្ខជាតិប្រើប្រាស់ក្នុងប្រទេសកម្ពុជា, Dictionnaire des Plantes utilisées au Cambodge, Dictionary of Plants used in Cambodia, ភ្នំពេញ Phnom Penh, បោះពុម្ពលើកទី ១, រោងពុម្ព ហ ធីម អូឡាំពិក (រក្សាសិទ្ធិ៖ អ្នកគ្រូ ឌី ផុន) គ.ស. ២០០០, ទំព័រ ៤៨៥, 1st edition: 2000, Imprimerie Olympic Hor Thim (© Pauline Dy Phon), 1er tirage : 2000, Imprimerie Olympic Hor Thim, p. 485; វចនានុក្រមខ្មែរ ពុទ្ធសាសនបណ្ឌិត្យ ភ្នំពេញ ព.ស. ២៥១០-២៥១១ គ.ស. ១៩៦៧-១៩៦៨ ទំព័រ ៦២៧, ១០១៣, Dictionnaire cambodgien, Institut bouddhique de Phnom Penh, 1967-1968, p. 627, 1013.

^ Reinhorn, Marc, Dictionnaire laotien-français, Paris: CNRS, 1970, p. 1635.

^ Mitsubishi UFJ Research & Consulting (February 2019), Baiomasu nenryō bi anteichōtatsu/jizokukanōsei ni kakawaru chōsa バイオマス燃料の安定調達・持続可能性等に係る調査 [Study regarding the stable procurement, sustainability, etc., of biomass fuels] (PDF), p. 16, n9

^ Hughes SR, Qureshi N, López-Núñez JC, Jones MA, Jarodsky JM, Galindo-Leva LÁ, Lindquist MR (2017). "Utilization of inulin-containing waste in industrial fermentations to produce biofuels and bio-based chemicals". World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology. 33 (4): 48. doi:10.1007/s11274-017-2241-6. PMID 28341907. S2CID 23678976.

^ "Nutrition Data: Yambean (jicama), raw". Nutrition Data. Retrieved 11 July 2014.

This is one of my favourite oils on canvas in our small home art gallery.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/21728045@N08/6206374368/in/photolis...

 

1938 Oil painting on canvas by Helen Louise Davidson of a Japanese musician.

I was told by the antique dealer that his painting was shown in Paris, France in the 1930's.

 

Place of Birth: Belleville, Ontario, 1870

Death: 1960

Biographical:

Helen L. Davidson (nee Mason) was born in Belleville, Ontario in 1878. She studied with Sir Edmund Wyly Grier, inaugural president of the Royal Canadian Academy, and Gustav Hahn. She also attended the New York Art Students League and the Hillerman School in Munich. Her career THROUGHOUT. She ​​was mainly based in Toronto, although she spent some time in the Humber Bay area in the early 1920s. Her preferred media were oils and pastels. Davidson belonged to (possibly only showed at) the Ontario Society of Artists and was elected to the Royal Canadian Academy in 1905. As a mature artist and she travelled and held solo shows around the world, including New York and Paris. According to one newspaper article Davidson provided them with a "Feast of Art". (Thanks to David Outhet for historical research.)

 

Media: Oil, Pastels

Studies: Art Students' League,

New York Associations,

Royal Canadian Academy of Arts

Ontario Society of Artists

Places of record keeping and archives:

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts - Library and Archives

Art Gallery of Ontario - Edward P. Taylor Research Library and Archives

National Gallery of Canada - Library and Archives

Toronto Reference Library

 

REFERENCES

 

artgalleryofontario.tumblr.com/post/12415221626/ayasha-19...

 

Documents about the artist:

"Manitoba Premier Bracken Honoured by OAC Alumni." OAC Review 35:4 (Dec. 1922): 168.

Davidson, Helen. Helen Davidson Paris: Galerie Charpentier, 1924.

Hughes, Margaret E. A Guide to Canadian Painters. Toronto: King's Printer, 1940.

Macdonald. "OAC Review, 1923." OAC Review 35:7 (Mar. 1923): 291-292.

MacTavish, Newton. The Fine Arts in Canada. Toronto: Macmillan, 1925.

McMann, Evelyn de Rostaing. Royal Canadian Academy of Arts / Royal Academy of Arts in Canada: Exhibitions and Members 1880-1979. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1981.

 

thenoisy1.tumblr.com/

 

Full text of report (pdf).

Ontario Society of Artists Annual Exhibition. (Toronto, February 23, 1906) "Artists' Society Exhibition." Globe (Toronto) February 24, 1906. p.16. verbatim records

Royal Canadian Academy Annual Exhibition (Montreal, November 21, 1929) "RCA Show Opened with Private View. Fifty-first Annual Exhibition Housed in Art Galleries Association." Gazette (Montreal) November 23, 1929. p.7. verbatim records

 

I purchased this painting at an antique store on lower Jane Street Toronto that later moved and finally closed. The owner of the shop said that she'd put me in contact with the previous owner, an interesting woman about town, but unfortunately that never happened. There was a framed pastel at that shop no doubt done by the same artist. It was of a South West American Indian head. When I returned, it had already been sold.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/21728045@N08/2345763324/

 

If anyone has any additional info about the painter, or even the previous owner the info would be most welcome.

 

Helen Louise Mason (1870-1960) was born in Belleville, Ontario, Canada. Her father died when she was 9 so she and her mother lived with her grandfather in Belleville. She took drawing lessons from a German sign painter and later attended the Moulton Ladies College in Toronto. She met Frederic Joseph Davidson and married him at age 19 after he graduated from U of T in modern languages. He was an early feminist and throughout their marriage encouraged Helen to paint. He completed his Phd in Leipzig and she audited art and history classes there.

 

Helen and Frederic traveled extensively in Europe, India, the Middle east, Africa, and the Orient and the Southwestern United States, both before and after the first world war. Travel at the time meant weeks of ocean travel or North American trains that were often subject to gunpoint holdups. She took her art supplies with her always, and confounded Frederic by learning languages on the fly in the vernacular so that whereas he was fastidious about correct grammar, she was better understood by locals.

 

It was important to her to paint from life, never from photographs, so she had to work fast while her subjects sat and light changed. She believed in light and shadow, studied the physics of the colour spectrum, and felt that painting from real life brought life to the work. Pastels don’t have the same drying time constraint of oils so she favored them when pressed for time.

 

Though an unknown Canadian artist today, nine of her works appeared in annual exhibitions at the Royal Canadian Academy of arts between 1905 and 1932. In 1924 and 1925 she exhibited in Paris at the Hotel Jean-Charpentier and the Salon des Artistes Francais. In 1926, Helen Davidson was accorded a one-woman exhibition at the Durand-Ruel Galleries in New York.

 

A few reviews of the time:

 

“…the (Paris) critics hailed her as the discovery of the age; the called her ‘une parfaite maitresse’. Writing for the Le Figaro, Arsene Alexandre, the most scathing of critics, accorded her unstinted praise.” (The Toronto Daily Star. June 25, 1925)

 

“It is as a portraitist that Helen Davidson strongly affirms her ability; her life-like figures, expressive and warmly colored, are very characteristic of the oriental peoples the artist most often selects as her subjects. The portraits of men or women are rendered with a rare mastery…” (Francois Nevil, Revue du Vrai et du Beau, Jan. 10, 1925)

 

see also Ayasha @ AGO

My home office setup. On the desk is my primary machine, Dell Latitude D820 (2Ghz Centrino Duo, 4GB, 80GB SATA 7200RPM HDD, 2nd modular 7200RPM IDE / DVD+-DL), beautiful Viewsonic VA1912wb 21" widescreen, Uniden wireless phones, Treo 700wx, Zune, wireless USB mouse, two WD 5400 RPM USB drives, and my MSFT Wireless Notebook Presenter Mouse 8000. In the desk is my switch for this side of my network, Vonage router, and old skool KVM). On the stand is my all-in-one scanner/printer/copier Epson CX4200 and franken-server running Win2003 Server x64, AD, SQL2005 x64, Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1 x64, VMWare Server 1.0.3 and SubVersion (AMD 3800, dual core 2Ghz x64, 4GB, two mirrored 250GB 7200RPM SATA drives for OS & data, one WD Raptor 150GB 10,000RPM for virtual machines) and two battery backups (server getting a 1hr one, the desk stuff getting a 15m one) under the stand. Behind the camera is where the DSL modem, router, and "home" PC is located.

My current setup at home. I have quite a bit of stuff in a very small space. The two monitors are hooked up to a workstation running Ubuntu edgy, and my laptop runs Ubuntu as well.

 

modern minimalist home theater design, detail visit javabali.info

beloved home is where my soul is longing to

 

zu hause ist wohin meine seele mich trägt

Creator: Queensland. Housing Commission. Home Designs (1950), digitised pages.

 

Copyright status: Out of copyright.

 

Description: Here are some common home designs in Queensland Australia. To assist the State Library can you identify and these designs Son the State

Library of Queensland Corley Explorer explorer.corley.slq.qld.gov.au/

 

View the original image at the State Library of Queensland: onesearch.slq.qld.gov.au/permalink/f/mk930d/slq_alma21119....

 

Information about State Library of Queensland’s collection: www.slq.qld.gov.au/research-collections.

 

You are free to use this image without permission. Please attribute State Library of Queensland.

When you find your very own slice of heaven you grab it and feel its warmth.

Went on a long drive last Sunday up to the Blue Ridge mountains and came across this house (one of many). After snooping around and taking lots of pictures I realized that it was still inhabited! Won't be doing that again in a hurry!

Whole view of completed home office.

Home construction in Seattle.

 

As a reminder, keep in mind that this picture is available only for non-commercial use and that visible attribution is required. If you'd like to use this photo outside these terms, please contact me ahead of time to arrange for a paid license.

Find Home Improvement Ideas & Tips from www.moneypit.com

Creator: Queensland. Housing Commission. Home Designs (1950), digitised pages.

 

Copyright status: Out of copyright.

 

Description: Here are some common home designs in Queensland Australia. To assist the State Library can you identify and these designs Son the State

Library of Queensland Corley Explorer explorer.corley.slq.qld.gov.au/

 

View the original image at the State Library of Queensland: onesearch.slq.qld.gov.au/permalink/f/mk930d/slq_alma21119....

 

Information about State Library of Queensland’s collection: www.slq.qld.gov.au/research-collections.

 

You are free to use this image without permission. Please attribute State Library of Queensland.

The Joneses' home in Fremantle, Western Australia. This is the kind of place we want to grow old in together.

MAC having just unloaded groceries.

 

Balcony gardening. Nice weather again. Hicima leaves are inedible.

ONLY the root portion of jicama is edible. The leaves, flowers and vines of the plant contain rotenone, a natural insecticide designed to protect the plant from predators. Eating any of these parts of the plant can cause a toxic reaction.

 

Pachyrhizus erosus, commonly known as jícama (/ˈhɪkəmə/ or /dʒɪˈkɑːmə/;[1] Spanish jícama [ˈxikama] (About this soundlisten); from Nahuatl xīcamatl, [ʃiːˈkamatɬ]), Mexican yam bean, or Mexican turnip, is the name of a native Mexican vine, although the name most commonly refers to the plant's edible tuberous root. Jícama is a species in the genus Pachyrhizus in the bean family (Fabaceae). Plants in this genus are commonly referred to as yam bean, although the term "yam bean" can be another name for jícama. The other major species of yam beans are also indigenous within the Americas. Pachyrhizus tuberosus[2] and Pachyrhizus ahipa are the other two cultivated species. The naming of this group of edible plants seems confused, with much overlap of similar or the same common names.

 

Pachyrhizus erosus

 

Pachyrhizus erosus Blanco2.249.png

Scientific classification:

Kingdom: (unranked):

Angiosperms: (unranked):

Eudicots: (unranked):

Rosids

Order: Fabales

Family: Fabaceae

Genus: Pachyrhizus

Species: P. erosus

Binomial name: Pachyrhizus erosus

(L.) Urb.

Flowers, either blue or white, and pods similar to lima beans, are produced on fully developed plants. Several species of jicama occur, but the one found in many markets is P. erosus. The two cultivated forms of P. erosus are jicama de aguaand jicama de leche, both named for the consistency of their juice. The leche form has an elongated root and milky juice, while the aguaform has a top-shaped to oblate root and a more watery, translucent juice, and is the preferred form for market.[3][4]

 

Botany:

 

Other names for jicama include Mexican potato, ahipa, saa got, Chinese potato, and sweet turnip. In Ecuador and Peru, the name jicama is used for the unrelated yacón or Peruvian ground apple, a plant of the sunflower family whose tubers are also used as food.[4]

  

Fresh jícama for sale at a farmers' market

The jícama vine can reach a height of 4–5 m given suitable support. Its root can attain lengths up to 2 m and weigh up to 20 kg. The heaviest jícama root ever recorded weighed 23 kg and was found in 2010 in the Philippines (where they are called singkamas).[5] Jicama is frost-tender and requires 9 months without frost for a good harvest of large tubers or to grow it commercially. It is worth growing in cooler areas that have at least 5 months without frost, as it will still produce tubers, but they will be smaller. Warm, temperate areas with at least 5 months without frost can start seed 8 to 10 weeks before the last spring frost. Bottom heat is recommended, as the seeds require warm temperatures to germinate, so the pots will need to be kept in a warm place. Jicama is unsuitable for areas with a short growing season unless cultured in a greenhouse. Growers in tropical areas can sow seed at any time of the year. Those in subtropical areas should sow seed once the soil has warmed in the spring.[6]

 

History:

 

The jicama originated in Mexico and central America.[7] It has been found at archaeological sites in Peru dating to 3000 BC.[7] In the 17th century, the jicama was introduced to Asia by the Spanish.[7]

 

In cooking:

 

Diced fresh jícama, seasoned with Tajín chili powder

The root's exterior is yellow and papery, while its inside is creamy white with a crisp texture that resembles raw potato or pear. The flavor is sweet and starchy, reminiscent of some apples or raw green beans, and it is usually eaten raw, sometimes with salt, lemon, or lime juice, alguashte, and chili powder. It is also cooked in soups and stir-fried dishes. Jícama is often paired with chilli powder, cilantro, ginger, lemon, lime, orange, red onion, salsa, sesame oil, grilled fish, and soy sauce.[8] It can be cut into thin wedges and dipped in salsa. In Mexico, it is popular in salads, fresh fruit combinations, fruit bars, soups, and other cooked dishes. In contrast to the root, the remainder of the jícama plant is very poisonous; the seeds contain the toxin rotenone, which is used to poison insects and fish.[9] The exterior of the seed pods are edible and can be used in cooking, for example the Ilocano dish “Bunga ng singkamas” where it is cooked in a stew as the main ingredient.

 

Spread to Asia:

 

Jícama

Yambean (jicama), raw

Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)

Energy: 159 kJ (38 kcal)

Carbohydrates: 8.82 g

Sugars: 1.8 g

Dietary fiber: 4.9 g

Fat: 0.09 g

Protein: 0.72 g

Vitamins: Quantity%DV†.

Thiamine (B1): 2%0.02 mg

Riboflavin (B2): 2%0.029 mg

Niacin (B3): 1%0.2 mg

Pantothenic acid (B5): 3%0.135 mg

Vitamin B6: 3%0.042 mg

Folate (B9): 3%12 μg

Choline: 3%13.6 mg

Vitamin C: 24%20.2 mg

Minerals: Quantity%DV†

Calcium: 1%12 mg

Iron: 5%0.6 mg

Magnesium: 3%12 mg

Manganese: 3%0.06 mg

Phosphorus: 3%18 mg

Potassium: 3%150 mg

Sodium: 0%4 mg

Zinc: 2%0.16 mg

 

Link to USDA Database entry

 

Units:

 

μg = micrograms • mg = milligrams

IU = International units

†Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.

 

Source: USDA Food Data Central

 

Spaniards spread cultivation of jícama from Mexico to the Philippines (where it is known as singkamas, from Nahuatl xicamatl),[10] from there it went to China and other parts of Southeast Asia, where notable uses of raw jícama include popiah, bola-bola (meatballs) and fresh lumpia in the Philippines, and salads in Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia such as yusheng and rojak.

 

In the Philippines, jícama is usually eaten fresh with condiments such as rice vinegar and sprinkled with salt, or with bagoong (shrimp paste). In Malay, it is known by the name ubi sengkuang. In Indonesia, jícama is known as bengkuang. This root crop is also known by people in Sumatra and Java,[citation needed] and eaten at fresh fruit bars or mixed in the rojak (a kind of spicy fruit salad). Padang, a city in West Sumatra, is called "the city of bengkuang". Local people might have thought that this jícama is the "indigenous crop" of Padang. The crop has been grown everywhere in this city and it has become a part of their culture.[11]

 

It is known by its Chinese name bang kuang to the ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia. In Mandarin Chinese, it is known as dòushǔ (豆薯; lit. ‘bean potato’) or liáng shǔ (涼薯), as sa1 got (沙葛, same as "turnip") in Yue Chinese/Cantonese, and as mang-guang (芒光) in Teochew, where the word is borrowed from the Malay, and as dìguā (地瓜) in Guizhou province and several neighboring provinces of China, the latter term being shared with sweet potatoes. Jícama has become popular in Vietnamese food as an ingredient in pie, where it is called cây củ đậu (in northern Vietnam) or củ sắn or sắn nước (in southern Vietnam).

 

In Myanmar, it is called စိမ်းစားဥ (sane-saar-u). Its Thai name is มันแกว (man kaeo).[12] In Cambodia, it is known as ដំឡូងរលួស /dɑmlɔoŋ rəluəh/ or under its Chinese name as ប៉ិកួៈ ~ ប៉ិគក់ /peʔkŭəʔ/.[13]In Bengali, it is known as shankhalu (শাঁখ আলু), literally translating to "conch (shankha, শাঁখ) potato (alu, আলু)" for its shape, size, and colour. In Hindi, it is known as mishrikand (मिश्रीकंद). It is eaten during fast (उपवास) in Bihar (India) and is known as kesaur (केसौर). In Odia, it is known as (ଶଙ୍ଖ ସାରୁ) shankha saru. In Laos, it is called man phao (ມັນເພົາ),[14]smaller and tastes a little sweeter than the Mexican type. It is used as a snack by peeling off the outer layer of the skin, then cutting into bite sizes for eating like an apple or a pear.

 

Its formal Japanese common name is kuzu-imo (葛芋, lit. =‘kudzu vine’+ ‘tuber’), though it may be referred to as benkowan (ベンコワン) or bankuan (バンクアン) after the Indonesian name bengkuang or as hikama (ヒカマ) as in the Mexican name.[15]

 

Nutrition:

 

Jícama is high in carbohydrates in the form of dietary fiber (notably inulin).[16] It is composed of 86–90% water; it contains only trace amounts of protein and lipids. Its sweet flavor comes from the oligofructose inulin (also called fructo-oligosaccharide), which is a prebiotic. Jícama is very low in saturated fat and sodium. It is also a good source of vitamin C.[17]

 

Storage:

 

Learn more:

This section does not cite any sources. (July 2017)

Jícama should be stored dry, between 12 and 16 °C (53 and 60 °F). As colder temperatures will damage the roots, whole unpeeled jicama root should not be refrigerated. A fresh root stored at an appropriate temperature will keep for a month or two.

 

References:

 

^ Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014. S.v. "Jicama." Retrieved July 18, 2017 from www.thefreedictionary.com/jicama

^ Pachyrhizus tuberosus

^ Johnson, Hunter. "Extension Vegetable Specialist". UC-Davis.

^ a b "Globalization of Foods-Jicama". Global Bhasin. Archived from the original on 11 January 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2013.

^ 'Heaviest' Singkamas Found in Ilocos

^ "Jicama Growing Information". Green Harvest. Retrieved 31 July 2013.

^ a b c Sanderson, Helen (2005). Prance, Ghillean; Nesbitt, Mark (eds.). The Cultural History of Plants. Routledge. p. 67. ISBN 0415927463.

^ Green, Aliza (2004). Field Guide to Produce. Quirk Books. p. 194. ISBN 1-931686-80-7.

^ Duke, James A. (1992). "Handbook of phytochemical constituents of GRAS herbs and other economic plants". Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases. CRC Press. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved June 25, 2010.

^ "Singkamas". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 2 January 2015.

^ "What is Jicama?". Innovateus. Retrieved 30 July 2013.

^ So Sethaputra, New Model Thai-English Dictionary, Bangkok: Thai Watana Panich, 1965, p. 366.

^ Pauline Dy Phon, វចនានុក្រមរុក្ខជាតិប្រើប្រាស់ក្នុងប្រទេសកម្ពុជា, Dictionnaire des Plantes utilisées au Cambodge, Dictionary of Plants used in Cambodia, ភ្នំពេញ Phnom Penh, បោះពុម្ពលើកទី ១, រោងពុម្ព ហ ធីម អូឡាំពិក (រក្សាសិទ្ធិ៖ អ្នកគ្រូ ឌី ផុន) គ.ស. ២០០០, ទំព័រ ៤៨៥, 1st edition: 2000, Imprimerie Olympic Hor Thim (© Pauline Dy Phon), 1er tirage : 2000, Imprimerie Olympic Hor Thim, p. 485; វចនានុក្រមខ្មែរ ពុទ្ធសាសនបណ្ឌិត្យ ភ្នំពេញ ព.ស. ២៥១០-២៥១១ គ.ស. ១៩៦៧-១៩៦៨ ទំព័រ ៦២៧, ១០១៣, Dictionnaire cambodgien, Institut bouddhique de Phnom Penh, 1967-1968, p. 627, 1013.

^ Reinhorn, Marc, Dictionnaire laotien-français, Paris: CNRS, 1970, p. 1635.

^ Mitsubishi UFJ Research & Consulting (February 2019), Baiomasu nenryō bi anteichōtatsu/jizokukanōsei ni kakawaru chōsa バイオマス燃料の安定調達・持続可能性等に係る調査 [Study regarding the stable procurement, sustainability, etc., of biomass fuels] (PDF), p. 16, n9

^ Hughes SR, Qureshi N, López-Núñez JC, Jones MA, Jarodsky JM, Galindo-Leva LÁ, Lindquist MR (2017). "Utilization of inulin-containing waste in industrial fermentations to produce biofuels and bio-based chemicals". World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology. 33 (4): 48. doi:10.1007/s11274-017-2241-6. PMID 28341907. S2CID 23678976.

^ "Nutrition Data: Yambean (jicama), raw". Nutrition Data. Retrieved 11 July 2014.

Jakubowice, Polska

 

browsing old photos I've found this one taken in the forest nearby my house...

 

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