|
As a food, Job's tears can be used like any other grain in soups and gruels, and they can also be ground to make flour. In Asia, the grains are believed to be beneficial for joint pain, and they are sold ... Many Asian markets sell Job's tears in their grain sections for cooking. Beaders and craftspeople also use Job's tears,
|
www.wisegeek.com/what-are-jobs-tears.htm
www.wisegeek.com/what-are-jobs-tears.htm
|
|
|
|
; Job's Tears Flou ... Job's Tears term - Related Content ... Cooking Tips & Advice...
|
www.recipetips.com/glossary-term/t--37942/jobs-tears.as...
www.recipetips.com/glossary-term/t--37942/jobs-tears.asp
|
|
|
In addition to attractive bead necklaces, belts, bracelets and earrings, they are also made into lovely rosaries with a cross at one end. In Central America, strings of Job's tears are commonly used for the arms and legs of quaint little seed dolls.
|
waynesword.palomar.edu/plapr99.htm
|
|
Job’s Tears are a member of the grass family, ... In Europe and North America, that’s about as far as Job Tear’s uses go. But remember, it is a relative of corn. In Africa and Asia, this plant is used as food and drink, as well. It can be ground into meal, eaten whole or brewed into a beer or used as a coffee substitute.
|
www.thisgardenisillegal.com/2006/08/jobs-tears-gardenin...
www.thisgardenisillegal.com/2006/08/jobs-tears-gardening-for-crafters.html
|
|
How long have Job's Tears been used for beads? We will probably never know. One was found in Timor (one of the smaller Indonesian islands) dating to about 3000 B.C. It was reported as a "bead," but there is no other evidence to support this idea.
|
www.thebeadsite.com/PLA-WORN.html
|
|
Rye flour is used in producing rye bread and crisp bread. ... From the 11th to 16th centuries in Europe this fungus caused a sickness called Holy Fire or Saint Anthony's Fire, the symptoms of which included (1) gangrene in which extremities hurt, went numb, ... McGee, H. 1991 (first published 1984). On Food and Cooking.
|
www.biodiversityexplorer.org/plants/poaceae/secale_cere...
www.biodiversityexplorer.org/plants/poaceae/secale_cereale.htm
|
|
To find Job's Tears in a health food store, ask for "Hatomugi", a Japanese term for Job's Tears. Hatomugi initially came to Japan from China and is used in traditional Japanese Kampo herbal medicine.
|
davesgarden.com/guides/articles/view/1714/
|
|
Such grasses include sorghum, millet, teff, ragi, and Jobs tears, ... Such species include buckwheat, amaranth, quinoa, and rape. The seed of the last plant listed, rape, is not eaten, but an oil is pressed from the seeds that is commonly used in cooking. This oil is being marketed as canola oil. ... De Ritis, G., Auricchio, S.,
|
www.celiac.com/articles/185/1/Gluten-Free-Grains-in-Rel...
www.celiac.com/articles/185/1/Gluten-Free-Grains-in-Relation-to-Celiac-Disease---by-Donald-D-Kasarda-Former-Research-Chemist-for-the-United-States-Department-of-Agriculture/Page1.html
|
|
DEER'S TONGUE; Used to get someone to love you, to obtain a proposal of marriage, ... DEVIL'S SHOE STRINGS; For protection from crossing and gossip, for gambling luck, for job getting. ... GARLIC CLOVES (AJO JAPONES); Protective, powerful, and edible; used in cooking and to repel all manner of evil. $3.00; HER-GAR-CLOV...
|
www.luckymojo.com/mojocatherbs.html
|
|