When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Digitaria didactyla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digitaria_didactyla

    This species is a mat-forming perennial grass with rhizomes and stolons. The stems can reach up to 63 centimeters long, [5] but are generally 15 to 30 centimeters, with a creeping form, extending along the ground and rooting at the stem nodes. [6] The narrow leaf blades are up to 7 centimeters long, usually hairless, and green to blue-green in ...

  3. Wheatgrass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheatgrass

    Spelt grass grown outdoors. With a deeper green color than wheat. Wheatgrass is the freshly sprouted first leaves of the common wheat plant (Triticum aestivum), used as a food, drink, or dietary supplement. Wheatgrass is served freeze dried or fresh, and so it differs from wheat malt, which is convectively dried. Wheatgrass is allowed to grow ...

  4. Thinopyrum intermedium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thinopyrum_intermedium

    Thinopyrum intermedium, known commonly as intermediate wheatgrass, [1] is a sod-forming perennial grass in the Triticeae tribe of Pooideae native to Europe and Western Asia. [2] It is part of a group of plants commonly called wheatgrasses because of the similarity of their seed heads or ears to common wheat.

  5. Wood splitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_splitting

    Wood splitting (riving, [1] cleaving) is an ancient technique used in carpentry to make lumber for making wooden objects, some basket weaving, and to make firewood. Unlike wood sawing , the wood is split along the grain using tools such as a hammer and wedges , splitting maul , cleaving axe , side knife , or froe .

  6. Saccharum officinarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saccharum_officinarum

    Saccharum officinarum is a large, strong-growing species of grass in the sugarcane genus. Its stout stalks are rich in sucrose, a disaccharide sugar which accumulates in the stalk internodes. It originated in New Guinea, [1] and is now cultivated in tropical and subtropical countries worldwide for the production of sugar, ethanol and other ...

  7. How to Make Your Own Brown Sugar at Home - AOL

    www.aol.com/own-brown-sugar-home-000000715.html

    And if nothing else, it remains an incredibly easy option for homemade brown sugar. Related: Easy Sugar Cookies. Big Soft Ginger Cookies. 5 Ways to Soften Brown Sugar. Read the original article on ...

  8. Brachypodium sylvaticum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachypodium_sylvaticum

    Dry inflorescence. Brachypodium sylvaticum is a tall tufted perennial bunchgrass that grows up to about a 0.9 metres (3.0 ft) high. The drooping leaf blade of the plant is dark green, or bright-yellow green, flat and up to 12 mm wide with a fringe of hairs surrounding the edge of the leaf. The leaves do not have auricles.

  9. Luzula campestris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luzula_campestris

    Luzula campestris, commonly known as field wood-rush or Good Friday grass is a flowering plant in the rush family Juncaceae. [1] It is also one of the plants known as chimney sweeps [2] or sweep's broom [3] because of the brush-like appearance of their flowers. [4] This is a very common plant throughout temperate Europe extending to the Caucasus.