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We proudly present our locally bred Ping Yuen Chicken, Tin Hong Chicken. For the best chickens, come to us!
SF Express charges HK$10 for deliveries to remote areas of Hong Kong. Please inform SF Express staff that this fee will be paid by Healthy Express.
Traditional Chinese medicine treats fever; its roots, fruits and pips can be used as medicine, light sweet in nature, can sweat and relieve external appearance, clear heat and diuresis. Compared with ordinary herbal tea, it has no bitterness and astringency, and tastes like watercress mangosteen.
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Australian Aboriginal peoples extracted the slender, edible seeds. This seed and the fruit, was an important food.[33]
The tree's leaves are often used as flavoring for sweet dishes. It is also used in Sri Lankan cookery, where the leaves are used to flavor a variety of curries. Leaves were used by the Polynesians to make baskets, mats, outrigger canoe sails, thatch roofs,[34] and grass skirts.
The fragrant male flowers are used in perfumery and are also distilled to make Kewra.
A large shrub or small tree of immense cultural, health, and economic importance in the Pacific, it is second only to coconut on atolls. It grows wild mainly in semi-natural vegetation in littoral habitats throughout the tropical and subtropical Pacific, where it can withstand drought, strong winds, and salt spray. It propagates readily from seed, but it is also widely propagated from branch cuttings by local people for farms and home gardens. It grows fairly quickly, and all parts are used, from the nutritious fruits of edible varieties to the poles and branches in construction to the leaves for weaving and garlands. The plant is prominent in Pacific culture and tradition, including local medicine.