The CroswodSolver.com system found 25 answers for edible mediterranean plant crossword clue. Our system collect crossword clues from most populer crossword, cryptic puzzle, quick/small crossword that found in Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, Herald-Sun, The Courier-Mail, Dominion Post and many others popular newspaper. Enter the answer length or the answer pattern to get better results.
Rate | Answer | Clue |
CHUFA | A sedgelike plant (Cyperus esculentus) producing edible tubers, native about the Mediterranean, now cultivated in many regions; the earth almond. | |
VEGETABLE | Any edible plant | |
RHUBARB | Garden plant with fleshy edible stems | |
CAULIFLOWER | The edible head or "curd" of a cauliflower plant. | |
COWISH | An umbelliferous plant (Peucedanum Cous) with edible tuberous roots, found in Oregon. | |
BANANA | A perennial herbaceous plant of almost treelike size (Musa sapientum); also, its edible fruit. See Musa. | |
PANIC | A plant of the genus Panicum; panic grass; also, the edible grain of some species of panic grass. | |
CASSAVA | A shrubby euphorbiaceous plant of the genus Manihot, with fleshy rootstocks yielding an edible starch; -- called also manioc. | |
ALGAROBA | The Carob, a leguminous tree of the Mediterranean region; also, its edible beans or pods, called St. John's bread. | |
CROWBERRY | A heathlike plant of the genus Empetrum, and its fruit, a black, scarcely edible berry; -- also called crakeberry. | |
BEET | A biennial plant of the genus Beta, which produces an edible root the first year and seed the second year. | |
TURNIP | The edible, fleshy, roundish, or somewhat conical, root of a cruciferous plant (Brassica campestris, var. Napus); also, the plant itself. | |
SEGO | A liliaceous plant (Calochortus Nuttallii) of Western North America, and its edible bulb; -- so called by the Ute Indians and the Mormons. | |
EGGPLANT | A plant (Solanum Melongena), of East Indian origin, allied to the tomato, and bearing a large, smooth, edible fruit, shaped somewhat like an egg; mad-apple. | |
SOUARI NUT | The large edible nutlike seed of a tall tropical American tree (Caryocar nuciferum) of the same natural order with the tea plant; -- also called butternut. | |
MAHON STOCK | An annual cruciferous plant with reddish purple or white flowers (Malcolmia maritima). It is called in England Virginia stock, but the plant comes from the Mediterranean. | |
ANGOLA PEA | A tropical plant (Cajanus indicus) and its edible seed, a kind of pulse; -- so called from Angola in Western Africa. Called also pigeon pea and Congo pea. | |
PARSNIP | The aromatic and edible spindle-shaped root of the cultivated form of the Pastinaca sativa, a biennial umbelliferous plant which is very poisonous in its wild state; also, the plant itself. | |
SKIRRET | An umbelliferous plant (Sium, / Pimpinella, Sisarum). It is a native of Asia, but has been long cultivated in Europe for its edible clustered tuberous roots, which are very sweet. | |
GROUNDNUT | A European plant of the genus Bunium (B. flexuosum), having an edible root of a globular shape and sweet, aromatic taste; -- called also earthnut, earth chestnut, hawknut, and pignut. | |
POLY | A whitish woolly plant (Teucrium Polium) of the order Labiatae, found throughout the Mediterranean region. The name, with sundry prefixes, is s... | |
HYACINTH | The name also given to Scilla Peruviana, a Mediterranean plant, one variety of which produces white, and another blue, flowers; -- called also,... | |
WATER CHESTNUT | The fruit of Trapa natans and Trapa bicornis, Old World water plants bearing edible nutlike fruits armed with several hard and sharp points; al... | |
WRASSE | Any one of numerous edible, marine, spiny-finned fishes of the genus Labrus, of which several species are found in the Mediterranean and on the... | |
PELLITORY | A composite plant (Anacyclus Pyrethrum) of the Mediterranean region, having finely divided leaves and whitish flowers. The root is the officina... |