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#1
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
Can sugar beet be eaten?
Cooked or raw? Shredded and mixed with something? -- Chris |
#2
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
The message ]
from Chris ] contains these words: Can sugar beet be eaten? Cooked or raw? Shredded and mixed with something? Yes, but not worth the effort - tastes like sweet mud. Even sugarbeet wine is awful. -- Rusty Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk Separator in search of a sig |
#3
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
Chris ] wrote:
Can sugar beet be eaten? Yes, but it's not particularly flavorful, since it's bred for nothing but high sugar content. I've heard of throwing a hunk of sugar beet in the jar when canning regular beets to add sweetness. Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
#4
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
Rusty_Hinge wrote:
Yes, but not worth the effort - tastes like sweet mud. I didn't complain when I was a kid and there wasn't much else! |
#5
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
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#6
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
The message
from Saxman contains these words: Rusty_Hinge wrote: Yes, but not worth the effort - tastes like sweet mud. I didn't complain when I was a kid and there wasn't much else! Looxury! Tha were looky! When I were lad, us only 'ad the tops, and that were only one leaf each on Christmas day, 'appen. -- Rusty Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk Separator in search of a sig |
#7
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
The message
from pb contains these words: In article , says... Rusty_Hinge wrote: Yes, but not worth the effort - tastes like sweet mud. I didn't complain when I was a kid and there wasn't much else! During the winter I do a bit of beating for several local shoots, beaters are notorious for collecting anything edible. Ho yus! Aren't we, just? You'll find three sorts of discarded corn cobs around the cover crops - nibbled by rats, scoffed by deer, and chomped by the beatership. I carry home lots of fungi - blue-legs, wood blewits, clouded agarics, deceivers, wax caps, shaggy ink caps, various boleti, beefsteak fungus, (rarely, unfortunately) blushers, various russulas, the occasional funnel cap, puffballs, orange peel fungus, common white helvella, and various of Lactarius (including L. torminosus, which must be boiled for ten minutes and the water discarded, otherwise...) It is not at all unusual to see beaters with carrier bags full of carrots, onions, calabrese, turnips, parsnips, sweetcorn or potatoes, in fact if it is eatable or sellable it will be picked. I have never seen anyone picking sugarbeet. Nobut, when the current crop of snow is harvested I'm off to a sugar beet field to harvest a vast beetroot I've noticed. I would have had one from another field, but woojer believe - one of the other beater's dogs cocked a leg on it? Out of a whole damned 40 acre field, it chooses the only beetroot. -- Rusty Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk Separator in search of a sig |
#8
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 13:09:37 GMT, Rusty_Hinge
wrote: Nobut, when the current crop of snow is harvested I'm off to a sugar beet field to harvest a vast beetroot I've noticed. I would have had one from another field, but woojer believe - one of the other beater's dogs cocked a leg on it? Out of a whole damned 40 acre field, it chooses the only beetroot. Was it a reasoned critique or just a passing comment? -- ®óñ© © ²°¹°-°² |
#9
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
The message
from ®óñ© © ²°¹°-°² contains these words: On Sun, 23 Nov 2008 13:09:37 GMT, Rusty_Hinge wrote: Nobut, when the current crop of snow is harvested I'm off to a sugar beet field to harvest a vast beetroot I've noticed. I would have had one from another field, but woojer believe - one of the other beater's dogs cocked a leg on it? Out of a whole damned 40 acre field, it chooses the only beetroot. Was it a reasoned critique or just a passing comment? Prolly the former, if it heard Lance Percival innit. -- Rusty Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk Separator in search of a sig |
#10
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
Rusty_Hinge wrote:
I carry home lots of fungi - blue-legs, wood blewits, clouded agarics, deceivers, wax caps, shaggy ink caps, various boleti, beefsteak fungus, (rarely, unfortunately) blushers, various russulas, the occasional funnel cap, puffballs, orange peel fungus, common white helvella, and various of Lactarius (including L. torminosus, which must be boiled for ten minutes and the water discarded, otherwise...) And you're still here? |
#11
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
The message
from Saxman contains these words: Rusty_Hinge wrote: I carry home lots of fungi - blue-legs, wood blewits, clouded agarics, deceivers, wax caps, shaggy ink caps, various boleti, beefsteak fungus, (rarely, unfortunately) blushers, various russulas, the occasional funnel cap, puffballs, orange peel fungus, common white helvella, and various of Lactarius (including L. torminosus, which must be boiled for ten minutes and the water discarded, otherwise...) And you're still here? Shouldn't I be? - I've been doing it (in an ever-broadening spectrum) since around 1951. -- Rusty Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk Separator in search of a sig |
#12
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
Rusty_Hinge wrote:
Shouldn't I be? - I've been doing it (in an ever-broadening spectrum) since around 1951. I do recognise some of the species you mention, but some of the russulas can be dodgy as there are so many varieties. I would like to flawlessly recognise a lot of species, but finding a mycologist to help and give up their time with recognition is the hard bit. |
#13
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Can sugar beet be eaten?
The message
from Saxman contains these words: Rusty_Hinge wrote: Shouldn't I be? - I've been doing it (in an ever-broadening spectrum) since around 1951. I do recognise some of the species you mention, but some of the russulas can be dodgy as there are so many varieties. OK - name me one really dangerous Russula... Even R. emetica will only make you puke. I leave the pink and red Russulae strictly alone. Oh, I forgot to mention Pluteus - especially P cervinus. And oyster mushrooms. And Jew's ear. And did I mention 34 of the 36 species of Agaricus? Parasol mushrooms, plums and custard, oh, I'm sure I've missed a lot - and these are only the ones I find while out beating. Sometimes. I would like to flawlessly recognise a lot of species, but finding a mycologist to help and give up their time with recognition is the hard bit. Even experienced mycologists often have to examine the spores under a microscope to be *SURE*. It took me around twenty years of finding blushers before I was so sure of what I'd found that I ate it without qualms. I've never looked back - blushers were to die for - but get it wrong and pick a panther cap, and it might be to die of. -- Rusty Direct reply to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co period uk Separator in search of a sig |
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