13 example sentences using arugula.
Arugula used in a sentence
Arugula in a sentence as a noun
I bet it would go perfectly with some stir fried arugula/mustard greens and bacon.
Wheat can be stored for years, but the shelf life of your kale/arugula/romaine salad is a matter of days.
Nutty flavor, not at all bitter like arugula.
It's more like a flat focaccia with more toppings, in my case hiding under a mountain of arugula.
One of my favorites is rucola/arugula - it's a weed but it's really quite nice in a salad. Very strong nutty flavor.
Sure, a cold corn and arugula quinoa salad is certainly much healthier than the vast majority of meals, hot or cold. But on average hot meals are likely slightly better.
Vertical farms growing organic lettuce and arugula in warehouses are not solving this problem, by the way. They are solving a much simpler, much less interesting problem.
Small farmers can't just call up their local supermarket and say "hey can you take a field's worth of arugula off my hands? No sorry I don't have any way of packaging it into retail portions, I've always sold in food-service size bags to restaurants."
>Small farmers can't just call up their local supermarket and say "hey can you take a field's worth of arugula off my hands? No sorry I don't have any way of packaging it into retail portions, I've always sold in food-service size bags to restaurants."
I only recall this once, and he was referring to the arugula they were cooking with, which is called rocket in Britain. He didn't say a rocket, but rather referred to shoving the arugula up the *** of someone who annoyed him.
In my tiny, poorly-weeded backyard, we've got herbs, beans, peas, 6 kinds of weird lettuce, arugula, tomatoes, strawberries, gooseberries, and more onions than reasonable. Right, it doesn't feed us entirely most days, but we don't have to buy many veggies.
I'm quite likely obese, much like I would be if I consistently consumed 3000 calories a day of organic orange juice, free range steaks, and arugula. The refocusing of anti-poverty programs and rhetoric on food insecurity as opposed to our now deprecated understanding of hunger is due to two causes.
Plenty™, for example, does arugula and kale, but their stories say "veggies" in a way that leads you to believe it's working for a much broader set of "veggies". Verticalfield, featured in this story, has pictures of tomatoes, and mentions mushrooms and strawberries. But on their website, the FAQ says ""Vertical Field can grow up to 200 varieties of crops, such as leafy greens, herbs, and lettuces". Again, arugula, kale, some herbs, etc.