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Page "Lychee" ¶ 2
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lychee and is
Jelly is also used in small cubes, stars, or rectangular strips, with flavors such as coconut jelly, konjac, lychee, grass, mango, and green tea often available at some shops.
* A " lychee mojito " is a mojito made with lychee syrup or liqueur and is popular in Hong Kong
It is closely related to several other edible tropical fruits including the lychee, longan, and mamoncillo.
Although apomixis may occur in some cultivars, research has shown that rambutan, like lychee, is dependent upon insects for pollination.
In Chinese medicine the longan, much like the lychee, is thought to give internal " heat " ( 上火 ).
The lychee ( Litchi chinensis ) is the sole member of the genus Litchi in the soapberry family, Sapindaceae.
chinensis is the only commercialized lychee.
According to folklore, a lychee tree that is not producing much fruit can be girdled, leading to more fruit production.
This is to limit competition between EU products and alternative external goods ( for example, lychee juice could potentially compete with orange juice ).
The aroma of tropical and exotic fruits such as pineapple, mango, or lychee is quite common, especially on white varietals.
It is related to the lychee and the longan, and is an evergreen tree that grows about 10 metres tall, with a short trunk and a dense crown.
In Hong Kong, it is called " foreign lychee " ( 番鬼荔枝 ).
Pine Island is mostly agricultural zoning ; some visitors travel over a hundred miles to purchase tropical fruit such as lychee and mangos grown and sold on Pine Island.
There is also a wild type of Lychee nut that is green and tastes different than lychee that comes from Taiwan.
Muzaffarpur is famous for exporting lychee.
The variety of lychee grown, Silaman 200 years, is believed to be found only on Ko Chang.
Fermented with lychee, rose and longan, Dianhong teas produces a brew that is brassy golden orange in colour with a sweet, gentle aroma and no astringency.
It is a blend of French vodka, strawberry, lychee and rose petals.

lychee and China
The lychee has a history of cultivation going back as far as 2000 BC according to records in China.
Cultivation of lychee began in the region of southern China, Malaysia, and northern Vietnam.
Unofficial records in China refer to lychee as far back as 2000 BC.
The lychee was scientifically described by Pierre Sonnerat ( 1748 – 1814 ) on a return from his travel to China and Southeast Asia.
Lai Chi Kok literally means " the point of lychee ", referring to a river named after a type of fruit tree native to China.

lychee and particular
High quality herbals and monographs on particular plants were produced in the period to 1250 CE including: the Chen Lei Pen Ts ’ ao written by T ’ Ang Shenwei in 1108, which passed through twelve editions until 1600 ; a monograph on the lychee by Ts ’ ai Hsiang in 1059 and one on the oranges of Wen-Chou by Han Yen-Chih in 1178.

lychee and for
There was great demand for lychee in the Song Dynasty ( 960-1279 ), according to Ts ' ai Hsiang, in his Li chi pu ( Treatise on Lychees ).
A cup of lychee fruit provides, among other minerals, 14 % Daily Value ( DV ) of copper, 9 % DV of phosphorus, and 6 % DV of potassium ( for a 2000-calorie diet ).

lychee and total
The lychee contains on average a total 72 mg of vitamin C per 100 grams of fruit.

lychee and production
South Africa and the United States ( Hawaii and Florida ) also have commercial lychee production.
The Fong Lau Chee Experimental Farm in Dongguan, Guangdong has worked with new agricultural advancements in lychee production.

is and cultivated
A forest crop that has not been extensively cultivated is ivory nuts from the tagua palm.
Spiritual life is cultivated, but students do not need to be Christian.
Mr. Sansom is English, bearded, formidably cultivated, the versatile author of numerous volumes of short stories, of novels and of pieces that are neither short stories nor travel articles but something midway between.
Almost every widely cultivated plant of this group is a companion plant.
" Almond " is also the name of the edible and widely cultivated seed of this tree.
Although amaranth was cultivated on a large scale in ancient Mexico, Guatemala, and Peru, nowadays it is only cultivated on a small scale there, along with India, China, Nepal, and other tropical countries ; thus, there is potential for further cultivation in those countries, as well as in the U. S. In a 1977 article in Science, amaranth was described as " the crop of the future.
It was recovered in Mexico from wild varieties and is now commercially cultivated.
The northern and western sides consist of stony but fertile plains, which are well cultivated and produce luxuriant crops of grain, with some cotton, vines, almonds, olives and figs, but the most characteristic crop of Aegina today ( 2000s ) is pistachio.
In cultivated areas, limestone may also be added to increase the ability of the soil to keep the pH stable, but this tactic is largely unusable in the case of wilderness lands.
Lunaria ( honesty ) is cultivated for the decorative value of the translucent replum of the round silicula that remains on the dried stems after dehiscence.
Although its author is unknown, its themes and subject matter are rooted in Germanic heroic poetry, in Anglo-Saxon tradition recited and cultivated by Old English poets called scops.
The term baccalaureus is a pun combining the prosaic baccalarius with bacca lauri ' " laurel berry "— according to the American Heritage Dictionary, " bacca " is the Old Irish word for " farmer " + laureus, " laurel berry ," the idea being that a " baccalaureate " had farmed ( cultivated ) his mind.
Originally cultivated in Iran and Mediterranean region, cumin is mentioned in the Bible in both the Old Testament ( Isaiah 28: 27 ) and the New Testament ( Matthew 23: 23 ).
The family is predominantly distributed around the tropics, where those with edible fruits were among the earliest cultivated plants in both the Old and New Worlds.
However, they note " since A. graveolens grows wild in these areas, it is hard to decide whether these remains represent wild or cultivated forms.
" Only by classical times is it certain that celery was cultivated.
The dandy cultivated skeptical reserve, yet to such extremes that the novelist George Meredith, himself no dandy, once defined " cynicism " as " intellectual dandyism "; nevertheless, the Scarlet Pimpernel is one of the great dandies of literature.
Only 35, 000 km < sup > 2 </ sup >-3. 5 %-of the total land area is cultivated and permanently settled.
Terrace ( agriculture ) | Terracing is an ancient technique that can significantly slow the rate of water erosion on cultivated slopes.
The Afghan economy has always been agricultural, despite the fact that only 12 % of its total land is arable and less than 6 % currently is cultivated.

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