harithasandhya,
I am wondering if you eat the seedpods yourself and if so , do you
eat them raw as in a salad or are the pods fried (?)
Please let me know for reference on how these are used as human food.
regards,
Ron
On Sunday, March 18, 2012 11:45:32 AM UTC-4, harithasandhya wrote:
>
> I've shared Convolvulaceae week: Ipomoea muricata from
> Trivandrum<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1049J7P5hM6kAI9QJ0k10uLRWr_2IegVgTGJBHSRRz_k/edit>
> -
> tracked<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1049J7P5hM6kAI9QJ0k10uLRWr_2IegVgTGJBHSRRz_k/edit>
> Click to open:
>
> - Convolvulaceae week: Ipomoea muricata from
> Trivandrum<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1049J7P5hM6kAI9QJ0k10uLRWr_2IegVgTGJBHSRRz_k/edit>
> -
> tracked<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1049J7P5hM6kAI9QJ0k10uLRWr_2IegVgTGJBHSRRz_k/edit>
>
>
> Dear friends,
>
> A few pictures of Ipomoea muricata from my garden in Trivandrum.
>
> The green seed pods are used as a vegetable. In Malayalam it is known as
> ‘nitya vazhutana’.
>
> Regards,
>
> Sandhya
>
> Ipomoea muricata flower 1
>
> Ipomoea muricata flower 2
>
> Ipomoea muricata plant
>
> Ipomoea muricata first leaves
>
> Ipomoea muricata green seed pods
>
> Ipomoea muricata green seed pod
>
> Google Docs makes it easy to create, store and share online documents,
> spreadsheets and presentations.
> [image: Logo for Google Docs] <https://docs.google.com> -
> tracked<https://docs.google.com>
>