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Galangal, the Indonesian member of the ginger family, comes in two forms.
Galangal, rice cakes, even Bangkok newspapers can all be bought there.
Galangal is also called Thai ginger.
Galangal, lemongrass and padaek (Lao fish sauce) are important ingredients.
Galangal is a cooking herb that is heavily favored in Laos, unlike in neighboring countries.
The word that he translated from the French as "Galangal" is actually the word "Calamus."
(The Matherian alternative, Galangal, is employed in protective work, especially that involving court cases.)
With two baby elephant sculptures in the entrance, next to a comfortable lounge area, the Southeast Asian motif at Galangal is evident early on.
The word "galangal" comes from the Arabic form of a Chinese word for ginger, "Liang-tiang".
Digestive toxicity: Galangal is edible, calamus is not, as it has some toxicity.
GALANGAL - A close relative of ginger, though somewhat more pungent.
Galangal, named for a ginger-like rhizome widely used in the region, calls its cuisine "Southeast Asian," but its spin is largely toward Thailand.
Kaempferia galanga, Galangal, (5.7%)
Gao Liang Jiang (Galangal Rhizome)
The spice used in South Eastern Asia which often goes by the name of "Lesser Galangal" is actually Kaempferia galanga.
Lengkuas or Laos Greater Galangal (Alpinia galanga)
The Galangal represents both Kether and Malkuth, the First and the Last, the One and the Many, since in this Oil they are One.
CONNECTICUT'S longest restaurant trend so far, Asian fusion, is still going strong, as is evidenced by Galangal in Stamford.
It is unknown if Mathers' use of Galangal instead of Calamus was intentional or a mistranslation, but it was to result in several notable changes, including symbolism and use.
The four ingredients listed by Mathers in his translation of The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage are Myrrh, Cinnamon, Galangal, and Olive oil.
Crowley gave the following Qabalistic meaning for galangal: "Galangal represents both Kether and Malkuth, the First and the Last, the One and the Many."
Not only does Galangal offer fine value for the price (all but four entrees are $12 to $17), with enough stimulating menu choices to make even a curmudgeon smile, but the atmosphere is so serene, it makes dining out a relaxing pleasure.
The earliest accounts of the Indonesian archipelago date from the Abbasid Caliphate, according to those early accounts the Indonesian archipelago were famous among early Muslim Sailors mainly due to its abundance of precious spice trade commodities such as Nutmeg, Cloves, Galangal and many other spices.
It's likewWell, have either of you ever heard of a spice called galingale?"
Galingale may refer to:
Of course, there are also the dried shrimp pastes, green curry paste, ginger and galingale, lotus and a thousand others.
The large man-made pond, now replete with reedmace, bulrush and sweet galingale, is to be saved.
I didn't even know there were such things as galingale and skirrets before I attended the Ark conference.
Galingale was a luxury, and when tastes changed, it was no longer worth the trouble and expense of importing it."
Floors were brick or sand-covered clay, and roofs were thatched with reeds, straw or galingale.
Griffen saw the big kitchen knife, the remains of chopped vegetables, strips of chicken skin, a piece of fresh galingale.
Cyperus eragrostis is a species of sedge known by several common names, including tall flatsedge and pale galingale.
Cyperus fuscus is a species of sedge known by the common name brown galingale, or brown flatsedge.
And the tom khar, a splendidly rich country-style soup with a coconut milk base, is beautifully balanced by the galingale, lime and chilies.
Galingale (Havlican) (Alpinia officinarum)
It is home to many rare plants, notably Cyperus fuscus (Brown Galingale), which is found in only a handful of sites in Great Britain.
Shichitoi (Cyperus tegetiformis) or Short-leaved Malacca Galingale is a species of thin long sedge grass.
These "sachets" contained sweet powders, aromatic calamus, benzoin, storax, galingale, cloves, and other fragrances from a herb or flower garden.
The author of the 14th century manuscript Le Menagier de Paris suggested a mix of grains of paradise, ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, sugar, and galingale.
These side dishes are grilled, fried, steamed or boiled and spiced with any combination of garlic, galingale (a plant of the ginger family), turmeric, coriander, ginger, and lemon grass.
The shatterlings open fire on both Galingale's and Purslane's ships, and while they manage to capture Galingale, they are unable to stop Purslane's ship.
It is also known as galanggal, and somewhat confusingly galingale, which is also the name for several plants of the unrelated Cyperus genus of sedges (also with aromatic rhizomes).
Asia contributed four and three-quarter pounds of ginger, a pound of cinnamon, three pounds of galingale, while Africa provided half a pound of grains of paradise, good for hot toddies.
At a Thai meal, diners are served a quick succession of bright, clean-tasting dishes seasoned with a Siamese ginger called galingale, lemon grass, nam pla (fish sauce), lime leaves, coriander and those devilish little chilies.
As Campion and the shatterlings are pursuing Purslane's hijacked ship, transmissions from Neume confirm that a shatterling within their midst, Galingale, is the traitor and a secret member of the House of Suns.
Packaged in plastic pill bottles bearing an unsmiling photo of a trusted authority, commercial formulas combine various herbal ingredients - such as galingale, lemon grass, kaffir lime and other flavourings used in Thai dishes - to target a specific disease or to promote general wellness.
With evidence showing a preponderance of pine and alder, with oak, elm and hornbeam also present; members of the galingale, buttercup and nettle families point to fen or reedswamp environments, while water-starwort, water lilies and bulrushes are among the aquatic plants present.
Thou didst leave the neat-herds and the kine, and the oaks of Himera, the galingale hummed over by the bees, and the pine that dropped her cones, and Amarvllis in her cave, and Bombyca with her feet of carven ivory.