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Cooking on a deserted island (was: Pancho's)
On Sat, 18 Jan 2003 21:26:44 -0500, Steve Wertz
wrote: On Sun, 19 Jan 2003 01:25:08 GMT, Karen wrote: Steve Wertz wrote in m: On Sat, 18 Jan 2003 23:32:53 GMT, Karen wrote: Steve Wertz wrote in m: Bamboo has an outer covering, like most trees and plants. It's not a mushroom. Actually, mushrooms are more closely related to wildebeests than to petunias. Was there another word I should have used to describe bamboo bark as opposed to their edible shoots? "Non-existent"..? :-) Ruff, Ruff! 'bark' is an outer covering of a tree. Most bamboo skewers I've seen were made out of the 'wood' of a bamboo. I've seen a few that were made of the 'wood' and a little 'bark', none that were exclusively 'bark'. Well, can you define the 'wood' of the bamboo stalk, considering the center is fleshy and not skewer-worthy? Bamboo is hollow AFAIK; it's a grass. I suggest you to go out ad try and chop some down some bamboo and see for yerself. The pith dies as bamboo stems mature, leaving them hollow. No such thing as bamboo wood. Bamboo's structure is roughly analogous to reinforced concrete... long, hard rods scattered in a matrix. |
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