Resource File:
Abstract:
This paper is a pictorial guide along with brief prose descriptions of thirty-six varieties of edible legumes that you may encounter in the Indonesian context. Whilst in the field of agricultural economics it is common to distinguish between legumes used as vegetables (young pods, fresh seeds, and sprouts) versus grain legumes or ‘pulses’ (marketed as edible dried seeds), this guide covers both together. A final section highlights a few inedible yet well-known or easily recognizable legume species.
Series:
Sulang Language Data and Working Papers: Topics in Lexicography
Series Number:
029
Publisher:
Sulawesi Language Alliance
Year Published:
2020
Publication Language(s):
English
Contributor(s):
Mead, David
author
Table of Contents:
1 Bushes and vines; adzuki bean; Bambara groundnut; chickpea; cowpea; fava bean; green bean; jack bean; jicama; kidney bean; kudzu; lablab; lentil; lima bean; moth bean; mung bean; pea; peanut; pigeon pea; rice bean; runner bean; snap pea; snow pea; soybean; sword bean; velvet bean; winged bean; yard-long bean; 2 Trees; agati; bitter bean; dogfruit; drumstick tree; Manila tamarind; nam-nam; Tahitian chestnut; tamarind; white leadtree; 3 Some inedible legumes; beach bean; blue pea; Borneo teak; calliandra; candle bush; coffee senna; coral tree; flamboyant; jequirity; Indian beech; lebbeck; Malay padauk; nicker; phasey bean; poinciana; quickstick tree; red bead tree; saman tree; sappanwood; sea bean; sensitive plant; wild gram; wild hops; References;
Version History:
Version 1 [12 April 2017] Drafted March 2017. Version 2 [30 April 2017] Added section on kudzu. Version 3 [26 September 2020] Added sections on coffee senna and red bead tree; modified section on coral trees.
Copyright:
© 2017-2020 by David Mead
License:
Text is licensed under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. Images are licensed as individually noted.