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| | botanical.com - A Modern Herbal Mustards - Herb Profile and Information |
 | | Garlic Mustard is an early flowering hedge plant, with delicate green leaves and snowwhite flowers. |  | | The seeds of the Mustards retain their vitality for a great length of time when buried in the ground, so that after the plants have once been grown anywhere, it is difficult to get rid of them. |  | | The Hedge Mustards and Garlic Mustard were all formerly allocated to the same genus to which this plant belongs, Erysimum. |
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http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/m/mustar65.html
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| | MUSTARD |
 | | Also known as Indian mustard, leaf mustard, and mustard greens, the plant was classified as Brassica rugosa Hort. |  | | White mustard, Brassica hirta Moench., is an annual with yellow flowers and hairy seed pods. |  | | The reported life zone for mustard and rape is 5 to 27 degrees centigrade with an annual precipitation of 0.3 to 4.2 meters and a soil pH of 4.2 to 8.3 (4.1-31). |
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http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/med-aro/factsheets/MUSTARD.html
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| | Wild Mustard |
 | | Generally a plant with a winter growth habit that has typical yellow mustard flowers and irregularly lobed leaves with wavy margins toward the base of the plant and much smaller, unlobed leaves at the top of the plant. |  | | At maturity the flowers of several mustard species, including Yellow Rocket (Barbarea vulgaris) and Wild Radish (Raphanus raphanistrum), resemble those of wild mustard. |  | | Additionally, the large terminal lobe in the leaves of yellow rocket helps to distinguish this weed from wild mustard. |
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http://www.ppws.vt.edu/scott/weed_id/sinar.htm
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| | Mustard gas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The name comes from impure mustard gas, which is usually yellow-brown in color and has an odor resembling mustard, garlic or horseradish. |  | | If mustard gas contaminated a soldier's clothing and equipment, then other soldiers he came into contact with would also be poisoned. |  | | A disposal plant built on site neutralized the last of this stockpile in February, 2005. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mustard_gas
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| | Spice Pages: Black Mustard Seeds (Brassica nigra/juncea) |
 | | Isothiocyanates are also the main ingredients of white mustard, horseradish, wasabi, rocket and cress, all of which belong to the same plant family. |  | | Black mustard is more important as a spice and oil plant, especially in India (see also sesame about vegetable oils in general). |  | | names (www.plantnames.unimelb.edu.au) Transport Information Service: Mustard Oil chemikalienlexikon.de: Allylisothiocyanat Floridata.com: Mustard Greens ( |
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http://www.uni-graz.at/~katzer/engl/Bras_nig.html
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| | Allrecipes Cook's Encyclopedia mustard |
 | | The mustard plant belongs to the same family as broccoli, Brussels sprouts, collards, kale and kohlrabi. |  | | Mustard seeds are sold whole, ground into powder or processed further into prepared mustard. |  | | A third species, the black mustard seed, has been replaced for most purposes by the brown species because the latter can be grown and harvested more economically. |
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http://allrecipes.com/advice/ref/ency/terms/7563.asp
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| | the Honey Dijon Mustard |
 | | The Romans carried mustard seeds with them to France, savoring them along the road where the plants soon grew wild and flourished in the fertile hillsides. |  | | Both the mustard seed and plant have been glorified for centuries in conversation, literature and poetry, and its use has been traced to prehistoric times. |  | | All Dijon mustard is made from brown or black mustard seeds - the strongest and most flavorful. |
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http://www.honeydijon.com/history.html
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| | MUSTARD - LoveToKnow Article on MUSTARD |
 | | White mustard is not fastidious in regard to soil. |  | | White mustard is used as a small saladgenerally accompanied by garden cresswhile still in the seed leaf. |  | | The white is to be found in every garden as a salad plant; but it has come into increasing favor as a forage crop for sheep, and as a green manure, for which purpose it is ploughed down when about to come into flower. |
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http://36.1911encyclopedia.org/M/MU/MUSTARD.htm
(1588 words)
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| | Black Mustard (Brassica nigra),Schoolyard Habitat, Waddell School, Manchester CT USA |
 | | Black, brown, and white mustard are generally recognized as safe for human consumption as spices/natural flavorings and as plant extracts. |  | | In addition to providing seed oil for industry and food products, rape plants (another type of mustard plant) are grown as forage crops for livestock and to produce seed for bird feed. |  | | As a medicinal plant, mustard has traditionally been considered a digestive irritant, rubefacient, and stimulant. |
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http://waddell.ci.manchester.ct.us/id_mustard-black.html
(424 words)
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| | Black Mustard |
 | | If you see a lanky mustard plant with narrow stalks of yellow flowers that is over your head, there's a good chance that it's Black Mustard. |  | | Black Mustard is a common plant in central and northern Illinois, but it is less common or absent in southern Illinois (see |  | | The seeds of Black Mustard are often used in the table condiment, Mustard. |
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http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/weeds/plants/black_mustard.htm
(477 words)
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| | Mustard |
 | | In summary, the three features of the mustard plant emphasized by the Lord are the small size of the seed, the large size of the plant in relation to the seed, and the rapid growth. |  | | Modern commercial mustard is prepared by grinding the seeds of black and white mustard and mixing them together. |  | | The seed of both black and white mustard is similar in size, about 1.0 to 3.0 mm (1/8 inch) |
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http://web.odu.edu/webroot/instr/sci/plant.nsf/pages/mustard
(2164 words)
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| | getReading - Powered by Evening Post |
 | | Tower mustard – part of the large mustard family of plants but nothing like its spicy cousin – grows to a height of one metre and flowers only every second year. |  | | Mr Glencross said tower mustard was a biennial with each plant dying once it had seeded. |  | | Once the plant was identified, countryside staff cut back scrub that was inhibiting growth and made sure the banks and verges where it grows were mown and trimmed less frequently and only after the plant had flowered and scattered its seeds. |
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http://www.getreading.co.uk/story.asp?intid=3970
(1034 words)
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| | mustard.htm |
 | | Mustard that produces a large plant too early may bolt or produce a seedstalk with bright yellow flowers instead of producing only foliage. |  | | Rows may be as close as 15 inches apart, or you can plant mustard in a wide row by scattering seeds in a band 5-6 inches wide. |  | | Mustard is normally direct seeded in early April or can be direct seeded in early August for a fall crop. |
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http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/dp_hfrr/extensn/Hort_Tips/Vegetable_Crops/mustard.htm
(226 words)
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| | About Mustard |
 | | Relatively few herbalists and gardeners grow mustard for seed; it is a different plant than that cultivated for greens. |  | | White mustard has almost no volatile oil; therefore, dry mustard is usually a combination of both black and white seeds. |  | | Black mustard seed is much smaller and more pungent than the white. |
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http://www.mustardstore.com/aboutmustard/
(226 words)
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| | IPAW-Garlic Mustard Identification & Control |
 | | Garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata) is a nonnative plant that is a major threat to Wisconsin's woodlands. |  | | The leaves of garlic mustard give off a distinctive odor of garlic, and the plant was probably introduced from Europe (where it is a native) by early settlers who were looking for a good source of salad greens. |  | | Because garlic mustard begins growth early in the spring, before native flowering plants are growing, spraying at this time should not cause too much if any damage. |
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http://www.ipaw.org/invaders/garlic_mustard/gm.htm
(922 words)
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| | MUSTARD |
 | | Mustard greens, the leaves of the mustard plant, are one of the greens considered to be an essential element in soul food. |  | | Mild white mustard grows wild in North Africa, the Middle East and Mediterranean Europe and has spread farther by long cultivation; brown mustard, originally from the foothills of the Himalaya, is grown commercially in the U.K., Canada and the U.S.; black mustard in Argentina, Chile, the U.S. and some European countries. |  | | The powerful "bite" of mustard seeds, which likely evolved as a deterrent to seed-eating rodents and birds, made mustard one of the first spices known to man. Mustard seed is found in Egyptian tombs. |
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http://www.yotor.org/wiki/en/mu/Mustard.htm
(627 words)
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| | MUSTARD |
 | | Black, brown, and white mustard are generally recognized as safe for human consumption as spices/natural flavorings and as plant extracts (21 CFR sections 182.10, 182.20 [1982]). |  | | White mustard, Brassica hirta Moench., is an annual with yellow flowers and hairy seed pods. |  | | The enzymatic action of myrosin on the glucoside sinigrin in black and brown mustard or on sinalbin in white mustard releases the mustard oil, which consists principally of allyl isothiocyanate in black and brown mustards and of p-hydroxybenzyl isothiocyanate in white mustard, the compounds responsible for the pungency (1.5-151, 1.6-41). |
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http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/med-aro/factsheets/MUSTARD.html
(741 words)
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| | Tower mustard - Arabis glabra: More Information - ARKive |
 | | Tower mustard is a very distinct plant which flowers from May to June. |  | | The report's aim was to establish the true status of tower mustard, evaluate the current management of the existing sites and make recommendations for future regimes, and to make an ecological assessment and fill in the gaps about our knowledge of the plant and its requirements. |  | | Tower mustard can produce large quantities of seed which seem to be capable of lying dormant in the soil for years before germinating. |
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http://www.arkive.org/species/ARK/plants_and_algae/Arabis_glabra/more_info.html
(741 words)
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| | The King's BLOG - Tower Mustard |
 | | Its rarity and rather undistinguished appearance means that tower mustard is not a plant which often touches the public consciousness. |  | | Tower mustard (Arabis glabra) is a biennial plant of disturbed habitats on free-draining, sandy soils in grassy and wasteland places. |  | | The fact that one has the seeds may constitute some offence if the plant is protected (reasoning being "where did you acquire the seeds"), so anyone considering propogation should be careful about what they do. |
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http://www.kingsblog.org.uk/pivot/entry.php?uid=standard-82
(741 words)
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| | Mustard, mustard seed foundation, mustard chicken recipe |
 | | Garlic mustard is the only plant of this height in our woods with white... |  | | Garlic mustard is an invasive plant that threatens Michigan's woodlands. |  | | Mustard is a minor crop in the United States, but in 1941, 124000 acres were... |
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http://www.dresspageant.com/mustard.html
(959 words)
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| | Garlic Mustard |
 | | Also known by the scientific name of Alliaria petiolata, garlic mustard is a cool-season biennial herb that ranges from 2 to 40 inches in height as an adult flowering plant. |  | | “Garlic mustard can easily be recognized at this time of year because of it’s lush basal leaves and because it is the only plant of its height in forests that produces white flowers," Kearns says. |  | | “Garlic mustard is a major threat to the survival of Wisconsin's woodland plants and the wildlife that depend on them,” Kearns says. |
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http://wcc.lakewandawega.com/garlic_mustard_ed.htm
(880 words)
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| | UI PLANT BREEDER RESYNTHESIZES A SPECIES, FINDS PUNGENT POSSIBILITIES |
 | | Wheat farmers in the Inland Northwest are eager to plant the new mustard as another rotation crop to break the cycles of insects and disease that can build in dryland areas where growers can alternate only between wheat and barley. |  | | Brown is an associate professor of plant breeding and genetics. |  | | His goal was to create a modern hybrid species that combined the winter-hardiness of turnips produced for Scandinavian climates with the insect, disease and drought resistance of black mustard. |
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http://info.ag.uidaho.edu/news/99october/102299f.htm
(836 words)
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| | definition of white mustard |
 | | Also, And, Foliage, For, Forage, Grown, Is, Kind, Mustard, Of, Oil, Pale, Plant, Pod, Seeds, The, Which, With, Yield |  | | Also, And, Foliage, For, Forage, Grown, Hispid, Is, Kind, Mustard, Of, Oil, Pale, Plant, Pod, Seeds, Sinapis, The, Which, With, Yield |  | | Alba, Forage, Is, Mustard, Oil, Pale, Plant, Pod, Which, Yield |
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http://www.brainydictionary.com/words/wh/whitemustard239663.html
(98 words)
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| | Black Mustard - Flowers |
 | | Inasmuch as the mustard which is systematically planted for fodder by Old World farmers grows with the greatest luxuriance in Palestine, and the comparison between the size of its seed and the plant's great height was already proverbial in the East when Jesus used it, evidence strongly favors this wayside weed. |  | | Commentators differ as to which is the mustard of the parablethis common black mustard, or a rarer shrub-like tree (Salvadora Persica), with an equivalent Arabic name, a pungent odor, and a very small seed. |  | | Another common and most troublesome weed from Europe is the Field or Corn Mustard, Charlock or Field Kale (Brassica arvensis)Sinapis arvensis of Grayfound in grain fields, gar-dens, rich waste lands, and rubbish heaps. |
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http://www.oldandsold.com/articles22/flowers-215.shtml
(736 words)
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| | botanical.com - A Modern Herbal Mustards - Herb Profile and Information |
 | | The young seedling plants of White Mustard are commonly raised in gardens for salad, the seeds being usually sown with those of the garden cress and germinating with great rapidity. |  | | Garlic Mustard is an early flowering hedge plant, with delicate green leaves and snowwhite flowers. |  | | The Mustards, Black and White, are both wild herbs growing in waste places in this country, but are cultivated for their seeds, which are valuable medicinally and commercially. |
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http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/m/mustar65.html
(3460 words)
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | Tower mustard is a very distinct plant that flowers from May-June. |  | | Tower mustard is a nationally rare plant with its own Species Recovery Plan, administered for English Nature by Plantlife. |  | | Tower mustard is declining in numbers as a native species in the UK. |
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http://www.worcswildlifetrust.co.uk/volunteers/branchline/branchline3.htm
(3460 words)
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| | mustard -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Most commercial mustard is prepared from two mustard plantsone having black seeds (B. nigra) and the other white, or yellow (B. hirta). |  | | The principal types are white, or yellow, mustard (Sinapis alba), a plant of Mediterranean origin; and brown, or Indian, mustard... |  | | Field of mustard in flower in Salinas, Calif. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9054478
(705 words)
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| | black mustard: Definition and Much More From Answers.com |
 | | Black mustard (Brassica nigra) is an annual weedy plant cultivated for its seeds, which are commonly used as a spice. |  | | Since the 1950s, black mustard has become less popular as compared to brown mustard (Brassica juncea) because some cultivars of brown mustard have seeds that can be mechanically harvested in a more efficient manner. |  | | Black mustard is similar to white mustard (Sinapis), although black mustard has smaller seeds. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/black-mustard
(305 words)
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| | CU Herb Society Herb of the Month - Garlic Mustard |
 | | Garlic mustard is so aggressive that monospecies stands have become established in many natural areas and now pose a threat to the natural quality of Illinois forests and significantly reduce biodiversity of our native plant communities. |  | | Garlic mustard can be distinguished from other woodland plants by the characteristic odor of garlic that the plants give off when crushed. |  | | Due to the biennial nature of garlic mustard and the varied dormancy of its seeds, several years of burning may be required and should be followed with hand pulling and mechanical cutting in order to provide effective control. |
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http://www.prairienet.org/herbsociety/hotm/mustard.html
(773 words)
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