For most Sudanese, the staple food is durra, used to make breads and porridge. |
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For almost all Sierra Leoneans, rice is the staple food, consumed at virtually every meal. |
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The most common staple food is a thick porridge known variously as ugali, sadza, nsima, or posho made from maize or finger millet. |
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If your staple food is kidney beans, try black beans or lentils for a change. |
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Although these essays are concerned with others crops too, only Ellen's contribution is really focused on another staple food, sago. |
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Namibia's leading miller, Namib Mills, said on Wednesday it will reduce the prices of the staple food, maize meal and wheat flour products. |
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Importantly, the project will not involve actually changing diets, as sweet potato is already a staple food in the target area. |
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The staple food of the Central African diet is cassava, which is a starchy root. |
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Now I know that their staple food is njera and that the local tipple, tej, is made from honey. |
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Zimbabwe will now rely on imports of staple food from Kenya, Brazil and South America, said state radio. |
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The staple food, boiled or steamed, is served with a sauce of leaves, flavored with dried fish or shellfish, and vegetables. |
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The staple food manioc, which normally sells for 350 CFA francs per kilogram, has almost doubled and is set to rise further. |
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Cassava is another staple food, often supplementing rice in filling the need for carbohydrate. |
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Rice is the staple food except among those in highland areas where rice is difficult to grow. |
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The seizures have disrupted the production of maize, Zimbabwe's staple food, and tobacco, the biggest foreign currency earner. |
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It certainly lends itself more to toasting than the close-textured rye breads, staple food in much of northern Europe. |
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Most of the restaurants serve French cuisine, and just as pap is our staple food here, so is bread over there, every meal comes with bread. |
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The staple food of the Lao is sticky rice, also known as glutinous rice or sweet rice. |
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Bananas and plantains are the staple food for half a billion people, grown by farmers in 120 countries. |
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In the developing world, 1.4 billion people depend on farmers' free access to seeds of staple food crops to guarantee their food security. |
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Intertidal clams, including razor clams, have been and continue to be an important staple food item for First Nations throughout the coast. |
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The recent food crisis had brought renewed emphasis on traditional staple food crops as ways to cope with food insecurity. |
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They represent the staple food of nearly everyone working in this profession in Brussels worthy of being called a conference interpreter. |
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The staple food of Tibet, tsampa, is toasted barley ground to a flour. |
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The staple food is couscous, with lamb and merguez sausage, or chicken or fish, plus an ample provision of vegetables and a hot chilli sauce as the standard accompaniment. |
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Many of their staple food essentials were not even available in the Australian market until they grew imported seedlings in their own back gardens. |
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So the sweet, starchy parsnip was doubly useful and became a staple food. |
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As the staple food, wheaten bread has been established since the Spanish regime, and the typical bun, called pan de sal, is the usual breakfast bread. |
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Unreliable rainfall frequently reduces the millet harvest on which the community members and their goats depend for staple food and for fodder. |
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Countries exporting food products also benefited from pressures on the price of staple food products on world markets. |
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Wheat, a staple food for humans, is one of three main cereals, with maize and rice. |
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On the contrary, cotton is mostly cultivated in rotation, i.e. in combination with staple food crops such as maize, sorghum or peanuts. |
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The staple food of a rabbit's diet is hay, and these furry friends also need a constant water supply. |
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Long queues at subsidised food stores and higher price tags not only on staple food, but on almost all food items are an everyday phenomenon. |
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Wheat is a staple food for humans, and can be replaced by very few other products in terms of quantity and nutritional quality. |
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Bolivia had created companies to support staple food and milk production, and had taken legal action to achieve fair prices. |
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Introduced into Africa by the Portuguese in the 16th century, maize has become Africa's most important staple food crop. |
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Chapati, a thin flatbread made from wheat, is a staple food, usually served with curry, meat, vegetables, and lentils. |
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Salt cod is a staple food eaten by itself and used in stews, casseroles and soups. |
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Rice is the staple food of the area, and meat and dairy products are also widely consumed. |
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Although there are plenty of meats, they should not be cooked more than staple food. |
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Rice is a major staple food for people from rice farming areas in southern China. |
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Atlantic halibut are eaten by seals, and are a staple food of the Greenland shark. |
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Nature is reborn every spring and mothers got busy with the wool required for clothes and for blankets and prepared the salted butter which was staple food in the past. |
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The first species of salmonids and trout, rainbow, which was cultivated as a staple food of man and domesticated. |
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Highly appreciated in the Middle Ages and during the Renaissance, it was considered a staple food and key to the local economy where it was bartered for, sold, and exported by sea to Tunisia, Algeria and Greece. |
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This is, apparently, a staple food of Australians everywhere, along with cold tinnies and anything from a barbecue. |
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Most recently, in the face of the surging prices seen over the first months of 2008, several net importing countries removed taxes and surcharges on staple food products. |
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Soon cultivated grain was their staple food. |
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When staple food prices rise, civil unrest can follow. |
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Tortillas, made from corn flour, are the country's staple food. |
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Members of the Luhya ethnic group are allotted their characteristic based on their staple food of chicken and ugali. |
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In a country where maize is the population's main staple food and where there is a mass rural exodus to the capital of Lomé, food security is a critical issue. |
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Over and over, riots and looting have occurred following rises in transport costs, staple food prices, or in other spheres most important for the poor. |
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Several, if not most, ESCAP member States hold national stocks of rice or another staple food, for example, the national stocks held by India and Bangladesh. |
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Yet rice remains the staple food for over half the world's population. |
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In addition, it may be useful to have a system in place that can quickly stabilize supply shortages of staple food commodities on a short-term basis. |
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In Kenya, a study on the impact of agricultural trade liberalisation on food security reveals that the volatility of prices in staple food crops is a major cause of food insecurity and undermines women's livelihoods. |
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Heinz baked beans became very successful as an export to the UK, where canned baked beans are now a staple food. |
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Rice is the main staple food and is served with side dishes of meat and vegetables. |
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Rice is the staple food of Sierra Leone and is consumed at virtually every meal daily. |
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Potato has become a staple food in many parts of the world and an integral part of much of the world's food supply. |
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Maize has become a staple food in many parts of the world, with total production surpassing that of wheat or rice. |
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However, a widespread problem of malnutrition soon arose wherever maize was introduced as a staple food. |
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Cassava is a major staple food in the developing world, providing a basic diet for over half a billion people. |
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Cassava is widely cultivated and eaten as a staple food in Andhra Pradesh and in Kerala. |
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In the mountainous regions of West Papua, sweet potatoes are the staple food among the natives there. |
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Until food production could catch up with the increasing population, prices, especially those of the staple food, bread, continued to rise. |
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The staple food of Arunachal Pradesh is rice, along with fish, meat, and leaf vegetables. |
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Chhattisgarh cuisine is unique in nature and not found in the rest of India, although the staple food is rice, like in much of the country. |
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Another traditional British breakfast consists of porridge, which has been consumed in Scotland as a staple food since the Middle Ages. |
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Although some lichens are only eaten in times of famine, others are a staple food or even a delicacy. |
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But for example in Norway, while small birds are certainly the breeding merlin's staple food, exceptional breeding success seems to require an abundance of Microtus voles. |
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The expansion of the economy between 1760 and 1815 saw the potato make inroads into the diet of the people and become a staple food year round for farmers. |
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Rice is the staple food item and a huge variety of endemic rice varieties, including several varieties of sticky rice are a part of the cuisine in Assam. |
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The main staple food in the study area is injera made from teff. |
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The purpose was to make soya beans more healthy for those for whom they are a staple food by correcting soya beans' natural deficiency in a chemical called methionine. |
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This was a mystery, since these types of malnutrition were not normally seen among the indigenous Americans, for whom maize was the principal staple food. |
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As in many other Latin American countries, maize is a staple food and is used in many of the widely consumed dishes, such as the nacatamal, and indio viejo. |
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The staple food, mashed green bananas, also turned into beer if left in a dugout with a bit of yeast or if left longer, could become waragi, a kind of tropical vodka. |
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