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Search Result for “horticultural”

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LIFE

The sour side of Thai cuisine

Life, Vanniya Sriangura, Published on 08/12/2023

» Sourness is one of the tastes that contributes to the well-rounded characteristics of Thai cuisine, a palatable subtlety that comprises sour, sweet, nutty, salty, spicy, bitter, tart and mild tastes.

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THAILAND

Medical hub lends more than a hand

News, Penchan Charoensuthipan, Published on 27/03/2021

» Nine years ago, Amaraphon Ong-at-itthichai, a 59-year-old senior nurse working at the Friendship Therapy Centre of Panyananthaphikkhu Chonprathan Medical Centre in Nonthaburi's Pak Kret district, wondered why many near-recuperated patients became unhappy at the prospect of being discharged from the hospital.

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LIFE

From seedling to bar

Guru, Nianne-Lynn Hendricks, Published on 22/06/2018

» MarkRin Chocolate was born out of the love for chocolate by Assoc Prof Dr Sanh and his wife Kanokked "Thip" La-Ongsri, who also created it as a long-term research project in Chiang Mai. Sanh found that the agricultural geography of Thailand qualified for planting cacao trees. The first cacao plant in Chiang Mai, Sanh crossed two cacao varieties and created his own hybrid called "I.M.1". He and Thip formed MarkRin Farms, to support and form a cooperative, so cacao farmers have a stable occupation since cacao is a monocrop and intercrop. Sanh and Thip also studied and researched cocoa beans fermentation together to develop chocolate from premium quality dried beans.

LIFE

On the hunt for the plant thieves

B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 07/12/2014

» Why would someone steal the world's rarest water lily? That was the question asked by Sam Knight in an article published in the British newspaper The Guardian recently. He wrote the lengthy article after the smallest water lily in the world, the Nymphaea thermarum, whose white flowers measure less than 1cm across, was stolen from — of all places — the Princess of Wales Conservatory in the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew in London.

ADVANCED NEWS

Bringing durians back to life

Jon Fernquest, Published on 31/07/2012

» Floods in 2011 killed almost all the durian trees in Nonthaburi. Major efforts to replant these trees are underway.