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Summary Of: Okra

Okra is occasionally referred to by the... Okra flower bud and immature seed pod... Okra flower bud and immature seed pod... Okra flower bud and immature seed pod... The lack of a word for okra in the ancient languages of... Okra may have been introduced to the southeastern... okra is widely used in a thick stew made with vegetables and meat... islands okra is cooked up and eaten as soup... deep fried okra is served in the southern United States... Okra fruits used as a vegetable... Okra fruits used as a vegetable... Okra fruits used as a vegetable... Okra slices show the pentagonal cross... Okra slices show the pentagonal cross... Okra slices show the... Okra leaves may be cooked in a similar manner as the greens of... Okra seeds may be roasted and ground to form a non... An acre of okra will produce seed enough to furnish a... Okra forms part of several regional... Okra is also enjoyed in Nigeria where okra soup... Okra oil is a pressed... Oil yields from okra crops are also high... Okra flowers range from white to yellow... Okra flowers range from white to yellow... Okra flowers range from white to yellow... okra pods are often stir fried... Okra gumbo and rice... Okra Greens and Corn Saute...

Encyclodia Page On: Okra

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Unpicked okra | Scientific classification | Plantae | Magnoliophyta | Magnoliopsida | Malvales | Malvaceae | Abelmoschus | Binomial name | L. | Moench | American English | British English | Hindustani | flowering plant | mallow family | cotton | cocoa | scientific name | annual | perennial | leaves | flowers | fruit | seeds | synonym | West African | Igbo | Nigeria | Bantu languages | Portuguese | Spanish | Dutch | French | Arabic | Middle East | Balkans | Turkey | Greece | North Africa | Russia | Southern Asia | Okra flower bud and immature seed pod | | Ethiopian Highlands | Egyptians | Moors | Arab | Red Sea | Bab-el-Mandeb | Arabian Peninsula | Sahara | meal | Mediterranean Sea | India | Americas | Atlantic slave trade | Brazil | Suriname | North America | Philadelphia | Thomas Jefferson | Virginia | United States | cultivars | Carbohydrates | Dietary fibre | Fat | Protein | Folate | Vitamin C | Calcium | Magnesium | recommendations | vegetable | A high resolution scan showing pentagonal cross-section of fruit | | Egypt | Greece | Iran | Iraq | Jordan | Lebanon | Turkey | Yemen | Mediterranean | Indian cooking | Caribbean | Haiti | Japanese cuisine | soy sauce | katsuobushi | tempura | gumbo | Okra fruits used as a vegetable | | Okra slices show the pentagonal cross-section of the fruit | | pentagonal | beets | dandelions | citation needed | coffee | American Civil War | plantation | negroes | Rio | Brazilian dish | Minas Gerais | Gumbo | Gulf Coast of the United States | Lowcountry | Central Bantu | callaloo | Caribbean | seed oil | unsaturated fats | oleic acid | linoleic acid | sunflower oil | diuretic | Okra flowers range from white to yellow | | soils | clay | citation needed | Germination | citation needed | mucilaginous | citation needed | kenaf | citation needed | Molokhiya | Luffa | Wikimedia Commons | Wikibooks | Wikibooks | 2006 | 09-23 | The News Courier | 2006 | 10-27 | ISBN 978-0-309-10333-6 | 2008 | 07-15 | November 9 | 1861 | University of Texas at Tyler | Categories | Malvaceae | Tropical agriculture | Medicinal plants | Fiber plants | Vegetable-like fruits | Cuisine of the Southern United States | Greek cuisine | Japanese cuisine | Turkish cuisine | Palestinian cuisine | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2007 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Okra".