Online Encyclopedia

CASSAVA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 457 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CASSAVA  , the name given to the farinaceous

root of two
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species of Euphorbiaceous
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plants, the bitter cassava, Manihot utilissima, and the sweet cassava, M . Aipi, both highly important
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sources of food starches; Manihot is given as the native Brazilian name in
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Spanish writings of the 16th century . They are herbaceous or semi-shrubby perennials with very large fleshy, cylindrical, tapering roots as much as 3 ft. long and 6 to 9 in. in diameter, and filled with milky juice . The slender stems, Cassava or Manioc (Manihot utilissima), less than
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half nat.
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size . 1, An inflorescence showing at a 3, Stamens and fleshy disc of male a fruit which will presently flower .
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separate into five one-seeded 4, Seed with its appendage (stroparts, about s nat. size. phiole or caruncle) . 2,
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Pistil of
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female flower . 5 to 9 ft. high, bear large spreading long-stalked leaves, with the blade divided nearly to the
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base into three to seven long narrow segments . The plants are probably natives of South
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America, but the bitter cassava, which is the more important of the two in an economic sense, has been introduced into most tropical regions, and is extensively cultivated in west tropical Africa and the
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Malay
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Archipelago, from which, as well as from Brazil and other South
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American states, its
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starch in the form of tapioca is a
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staple article of export . The
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sap of the bitter cassava root contains hydrocyanic acid, and the root, being therefore highly poisonous, cannot be eaten in a fresh condition; while on the other hand the sweet cassava is perfectly innocuous, and is employed as a table
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vegetable . Exposure to heat dissipates the poisonous principle, and the concentrated juice is in that state used as the basis of cassareep and other sauces . From the bitter cassava roots many different food preparations are made in Brazil .

The roots are preserved for use by being simply cleaned, sliced and dried; from such dried slices manioc or cassava

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meal, used for cassava cakes, &c., is prepared by rasping . The starch also is separated and used for food under the name of Brazilian
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arrowroot; and this, when agglomerated into pellets on hot plates, forms the `tapioca (q.v.) of commerce . Cassava starch has a stellate hilum, which readily distinguishes it under the microscope from other starches .

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