Tapioca

Tapioca is an essentially flavourless starchy ingredient used in cooking, similar to sago. Tapioca is produced from treated and dried cassava (manioc) root. Tapioca takes the form either of fine dried flakes, or more commonly, small hard white spheres or 'pearls' that are soaked before use. These spheres are a common ingredient in Southeast Asian desserts, in puddings such as tapioca pudding[?], and in drinks such as bubble tea where they provide a chewy contrast to the sweetness of the drink. Cassava flour (tapioca flour) is commonly used as a food thickener, and is also used as a binder in tablets.

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mines at Kimberley and in the gold mines at Johannesburg. Sometimes people to all the large towns, and a person can travel in one day by workers come for six months or a year, because they want money for girls they wish to marry. When they arrive at the mines, after their are given places where they can live. If the men are single they live gates. In these compounds there are houses where the men sleep, and provide people to clean these houses and to do the cooking. If the workman has a wife he is given a house in a mine village, great number of houses placed close together along straight roads. corrugated iron. In each location there are hundreds of people who have come to work at are all strangers to each other and speak many different languages. clothes are very expensive to buy and soon wear out, the natives often maize, corn, and meal; but there are shops in the locations and and bread, and where they can also get clothes and other European to the sick and the injured. There are also schools for the children the children speak different languages, and their parents only stay sums, and to sew. The country near the mines is very often dry and dusty. There are no .

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Licence of article: GNU FDL.
Original source @ wikipedia.