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#Undaria
wikipediapictures · 1 month
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Wakame
“Undaria pinnatifida is a brown seaweed that reaches an overall length of 1-3 m. Undaria is a native of the Japan Sea and the northwest Pacific coasts of Japan and Korea. In Japan, Undaria, known locally as 'wakame', is extensively cultivated as a food plant. Japanese consumption of the alga is around 200,000 tonnes of fresh or dried plant per annum. Undaria is regarded as a pest because it is highly invasive, grows rapidly and has the potential to overgrow and exclude native seaweeds. It was first detected in Australia in 1988 near Triabunna on the east coast of Tasmania. Over the following ten years it spread along 100 kms of the Tasmanian east coast and also to Victoria - the most likely vector being international shipping.” - via Wikimedia Commons
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Harness the Power of Undaria Pinnatifida: Premium Undaria Pinnatifida Powder
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mjrevu · 9 months
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Dive into Radiant Skin with OSEA Undaria Algae Body Oil – The Ultimate Post-Shower Elixir!
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najia-cooks · 8 months
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[ID: First photo shows a mixed seaweed salad topped with toasted sesame seeds; in the background are bowls of pickled daikon and kake udon. Second photo is a close-up showing light shining through the seaweed. End ID]
わかめと昆布サラダ / Wakame to konbu sarada (Seaweed and kelp salad)
A wide variety of seaweed-based salads are made by Japanese home cooks. They may contain only a mix of seaweeds and a dressing, but may also feature vegetables including cucumber, carrots, lotus root (レンコン / はす), daikon (だいこん), corn, edamame (枝豆), or onion. Dressings are as varied as cooks, and may be based around sesame oil (ごま油), rice vinegar (米酢), miso paste (みそ / 味噌), ponzu sauce (ポン酢), or mayonnaise (マヨ).
This recipe is a good way to use up reconstituted kombu and wakame that were steeped to make soup stock. It includes instructions for two dressings: one based on rice vinegar and sesame oil, and another with a sesame-mayo base.
"わかめ" or "ワカメ" ("wakame") is likely from "若" ("waka," "young") +‎ "海布" ("me," "seaweed"); it is a particular species of edible seaweed (Undaria pinnatifida) that is farmed in Japan, Korea, and China. It is sometimes called "sea mustard" in English. Without further specification, "wakame" in a culinary context is taken to mean the leaves of the seaweed; these are the same leaves that are eaten in miso soup (みそ汁).
The etymology of "昆布" ("kombu" or "konbu") is unknown. It may be a phonetic Japanese reading of the Middle Chinese "昆布" (Mandarin: "kūnbù") (itself from "綸布" "*krūn pās," "green ribbon" + "cloth"), used to refer to various types of kelp and seaweed. In Japanese, the term refers to any of a few species of edible kelp from the Laminariaceae family.
Dried kombu is steeped to make one type of dashi ("出汁" / "だし"), a stock that is used in various soups and sauces. Once reconstituted, it may be steeped again to make 二番だし ("niban dashi," "second dashi"), sliced and simmered as one ingredient in a 煮物 ("nimono," simmered dish), or roasted and combined with other seaweeds and spices to make 振り掛け ("furikake").
"サラダ" ("sarada") is probably derived from the English "salad."
Note that the "seaweed salad" served at Japanese restaurants in the U.S. is not commonly eaten in Japan. It is shipped out to restaurants and stores pre-packaged, and is made with colored オゴノリ ("ogonori"; "agar" on ingredients lists), きくらげ ("kikurage"; "wood ear mushroom" or "fungus" on ingredients lists), and byproducts of wakame including 茎わかめ ("kukiwakame," wakame stem) and メカブ ("mekabu," wakame sprouts; both listed as "wakame" or "seaweed" on ingredients lists). You may be able to find this salad in the freezer section of your local Asian grocery store. If you want to approximate the texture of this salad at home, try buying some mixture of ogonori, kikurage, kukiwakame, mekabu, モズク ("mokuzu"), and/or ひじき ("hijiki"). Instructions for the dressing are below.
Recipe under the cut!
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Ingredients:
For the salad:
2 cups total reconstituted kombu, wakame, hijiki, or other kelp or seaweed
Vegetable additions to seaweed salads are possible and common. Try adding some cucumber, julienned carrots, sliced lotus root, sliked daikon radish, corn, edamame, or sliced onion that's been soaked in plum vinegar for 15 minutes.
If you're including cucumbers, slice them, salt them, allow them to drain in a colander for about 10 minutes, then gently squeeze them of excess liquid, to avoid making your salad watery.
For dressing 1:
1 Tbsp unseasoned rice vinegar (米酢)
1 Tbsp toasted sesame oil (煎りごま油)
1/2 kosher salt
1/2 tsp vegetarian granulated sugar
1/2 tsp Japanese soy sauce (しょうゆ / 醤油) (such as Kikkoman's)
2 tsp toasted sesame seeds (いりごま)
To make U.S. restuarant-style seaweed salad, omit the soy sauce; replace the sugar with high fructose corn syrup; and add a pinch of cayenne pepper, 1/4 tsp of onion powder or yeast extract, and a pinch of MSG.
For dressing 2:
2 Tbsp vegan mayonnaise
1/2 tsp unseasoned rice vinegar (米酢)
1/4 tsp dried ground shiitake mushroom, or vegetarian dashi powder
1/4 tsp vegetarian granulated sugar
Drop of djion mustard
Pinch kosher salt
1 tsp Japanese soy sauce (しょうゆ / 醤油) (such as Kikkoman's)
Drizzle of mirin (みりん)
2 tsp toasted sesame seeds, ground in a mortar and pestle or spice mill
If you eat eggs, you can replace the first five ingredients with 2 Tbsp Kewpie mayo (キューピーマヨ).
For a halal version, replace the mirin with an extra pinch of sugar.
Instructions:
For the salad:
1. Slice kombu into very thin strips. Slice wakame into thin strips, or leave as-is, as desired. Slice other flat dried seaweed into thin strips or bite-sized pieces.
For dressing 1:
1. Whisk all ingredients except sesame seeds together in a small bowl. Toss with seaweed. Top with sesame seeds and serve cold.
For dressing 2:
1. Whisk all ingredients together in a small bowl. Toss with seaweed. Serve cold.
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gravehags · 3 months
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i washed my hair (finally...after 5 days lmao) and i smell so good rn between my conditioner (it has orange oil in it) and my hair oil (living proof anti frizz) and my body wash (rose jam from lush) and my body oil (osea undaria algae oil, smells like citrus) someone please come over and sniff me
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theoarfishexpress · 1 year
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The Ancestors
Before divine selection could take place and the Tetrarch could begin, the deities had to choose what would inhabit their world. They would need to be adaptable enough to survive the ecological shock, and able to form a functional ecosystem from the beginning, but the rest was up to the deities’ own inscrutable choices. The majority of colonists were sourced from Earth’s Holocene epoch, but a handful of the founders were inexplicably from various other time periods. To allow more ecologically complex organisms to survive colonization, the cherry-picked settlers were introduced in successive waves, each supporting the next. The first assisted in the final steps of terraforming, the hardiest microbes starting or regulating such vital processes as oxygenation and the carbon cycle. Each wave that followed increased in size and diversity, until the Tetrarch’s founding menagerie was complete. This eclectic sample of Earth would give rise to every oddity making up the Tetrarch’s biosphere, the primordial ancestors from which all of its life descends. What follows is a list of these ancestors at the time that the Tetrarch was ready to begin, not including the myriad unicellular organisms and viruses whose descendants are also important. Plants and Algae -Brazilian Waterweed (Egeria densa) -Coconut Palm (Cocos nucifera) -Erect Prickly Pear (Opuntia stricta) -Grasses (~ 5 species) -Hooker’s Chives (Allium hookeri) -Leptosporangiate Ferns (~ 5 species) -Lithops (~ 5 species) -Mosses (~ 5 species) -Macroscopic Algae (~ 25 species, including Undaria and Acetabularia) -Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora) -Spanish Moss (Tillandsia usneoides) -Turtlegrass (Thalassia testudinum) Vertebrates -African Clawed Frog (Xenopus laevis) -Banded Knifefish (Gymnotus carapo) -Conodonts (~ 5 species) -Hapalops sp. -Longspined Porcupinefish (Diodon holocanthus) -Pacific Viperfish (Chauliodus macouni) -Spiny Softshell Turtle (Apalone spinifera) -Star-Nosed Mole (Condylura cristata) Arthropods -Atlantic Horseshoe Crab (Limulus polyphemus) -Coccus Soft Scales (~ 5 species) -Copepods (~ 25 species) -Earwigs (~ 5 species) -Goose Barnacles (~ 5 species) -Hoverflies (~ 5 species) -Lacewings (~ 5 species) -Mites (~ 25 species) -Pseudoscorpions (~ 5 species) -Rainbow Mantis Shrimp (Pseudosquilla ciliata) -Springtails (~ 15 species) -Water Fleas (~ 5 species) Molluscs -Applesnails (~ 5 species) -Hippurites sp. -Sea Angels (~ 5 species) -Sea Butterflies (~ 5 species) -Venus Clams (~ 5 species) Other Animals -Arrow Worms (~ 5 species) -Brittle Stars (~ 5 species) -Clitellate Worms (~ 15 species, including leeches, earthworms, and naidids) -Demosponges (~ 10 species) -Dugesia Planarians (~ 5 species) -Nematodes (~ 300 species) -Rotifers (~ 5 species) -Tardigrades (~ 5 species) -Velvet Worms (~ 5 species) Fungi -Collared Earthstar (Geastrum triplex) -Lichens (~ 5 species) -Molds (~ 50 species)
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123234545565567 · 16 days
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123244555666787 · 16 days
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whenlovebeckons · 1 month
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happiness is sipping dandelion hibiscus tea with lavender syrup out of my favorite mug / reading a good book / booking a trip to celebrate our anniversary / going to my monthly massage / taking a long hot bath with epsom salt and undaria oil / writing a lavender cake recipe / crunching the numbers on international healthcare plans / creating my own system techo and ordering supplies from plotter 💫
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Premium Wakame Powder: The Delicacy of Wakame
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Enjoy the subtle flavors and nutritional benefits of Wakame with our premium Wakame Powder. From pristine coastal waters, this seaweed treasure is expertly harvested and converted into a convenient powder. Wakame is rich in vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants, supporting heart health, promoting digestion, and improving overall health. Enjoy Wakame's delicate taste and nutritional benefits in your favorite recipes, soups, salads, and more. With our premium Wakame Powder, you can discover the wonders of this marine delight.
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ukiuki-tomatoma-rog · 2 months
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▮ デスイカ
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📅日付:24.08.09
 ❱❱❱𝐊𝐏 ソウカイ - Noa Mochidzuki🌝  ❱❱❱𝐏𝐋 966   - Justin-Merle Kidman⚔️      みかみん  - Charlotte Hinata Coyne🧭      ざくろ  - Eldred Jude Appleby🍎      とりお  - Undaria Kazukami😈      かじま  - Michaël Soleil🌞
   ‥✦ 𝑬𝑵𝑫 ✦‥
▾ 感想
シナリオクリア!全員生還だ~~~~~!!!!デスイカ面白ッ!!!!!こういう感じなんだ?!斜め上すぎて引きつり笑い出てた。デスイカ楽しかったよ~~~~!!!!🍉 仲良く皆でワイワイやったの可愛かったな…ツッコミどころのあるコメディ…好きだ。あと「◯◯◯◯◯◯でやります!?」はめちゃめちゃ面白かった。これ一生残る。これ…ネタバレなんだ…(絶句) ジェス久々に動かせて嬉しかった~だし、ジェスの誕生日の後だったので余計に気分がいいです😊PLが ジェスでカッコイイ事させてもらったりアホやらせてもらったりむちゃくちゃいったりアンダリアくんとワイワイ出来て楽しかった🥳顔面に押し付けるな。 大人数でワイワイするのはやっぱ楽しいな……またみんなで遊ぼう!!そして……また海に行こうな!!!!!✊✊✊
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tinselisland · 2 months
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Discover Emma Roberts' Favorite Osea Undaria Algae Body Oil Available on Amazon for $49
Emma Roberts 📷:Instagram Osea Undaria Algae Body Oil has become a favorite among skincare enthusiasts, and Emma Roberts is no exception. Emma Roberts, a renowned actress for over two decades, has a refreshingly simple approach to beauty—especially during the summer. In a recent interview with Byrdie, Roberts shared her warm weather beauty tips, emphasizing her preference for skincare over…
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kirstinbensen · 3 months
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: OSEA Undaria Algae Body Oil NEW BOX.
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mhkeiger · 5 months
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: NWT OSEA Undaria Cleansing Body Polish.
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