If you or your church supports missionaries in a country, you may do a more in-depth study. Look at other countries on the map and explain that missionaries carried Jesus’ word there too. You may also point out Rome, Corinth, and other Bible places that the apostles carried the Gospel too (we will look at these trips later in the year). Using a map or globe, point to Israel where Jesus began his ministry. The sponge seems very small, but the water in the sponge will spread and wet the whole paper towel. Take a small piece of wet sponge and place it in the middle. He spoke to people, and they spoke to other people, and they spoke to still more people. He couldn’t catch an airplane to fly around the world. When Jesus first began to preach the Gospel, He did not have internet or television. Remind your children that Jesus lived in a day vastly different to our day. (If possible, write a surprise Bible memory verse on the balloon that appears when you blow it up.) If we ignored the small piece of rubber and said it wasn’t much, we would never be able to enjoy a big balloon. Then begin to blow the balloon up until it is big. An egg becomes an ostrich.Įxamine an uninflated balloon (you may also substitute for a stick of gum.) Talk about how small and unimportant it looks. People start as babies but grow to be adults. For example, seeds are small but become big plants. Ask your child to name some things which start out small but grow big. Development of improved N (nitrogen) management practices is crucial to lowering the carbon footprint in oilseed crops.Many things that begin small become large. M21 will have a major research focus on the feasibility of incorporating several diverse crops, including mustards, into the major crop rotations (cereal, oilseed, pulse) to determine how they will influence pests, water use efficiency, soil nutrients, crop and soil productivity, and carbon footprint. The lack of new herbicides registered for use in mustards is a serious concern that Mustard 21 (M21), AAFC and their collaborators will be addressing in the planned research with the Diverse Field Crop Cluster. Limited options for managing hard-to-kill broadleaf weeds pose a major challenge for mustard production. The mustard breeding program at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) is driven to improve the genetics of new varieties. Mustard production in Canada is concentrated in the drier, southern prairies, where drought-tolerance is needed for crop success. Carinata ( Brassica carinata), also in the mustard family, is being developed as a dedicated industrial oilseed crop. Canada is the world’s largest exporter of condiment mustard seed, supplying both Yellow and Brown/Oriental mustards to the world trade market. Globally, three types of mustard seeds are used as condiments: Yellow ( Sinapis alba), Brown and Oriental mustard (Brassica juncea). Depending on the type of mustard ingredient used, mustard provides emulsification, stability, water and fat binding, preservative and nutritive properties to foods. Mustard has unique functional properties that can be applied to many foods including baked goods, packaged meat products, condiments and emulsion-type dressings. It can be milled to produce flour and bran, and de-oiled to produce an oil fraction and a high protein meal. Mustard is a diverse commodity– it can be processed into various forms including whole seed, cracked seeds and finely or coarsely ground seeds. This high biological value makes mustard a protein source of interest for human nutrition. Mustard protein has an excellent nutritional profile: rich in lysine, with higher methionine and cysteine levels than most cereal and oilseed proteins. Glucosinolates are important natural components in mustard as their breakdown produces isothiocyanates– the agents responsible for the heat, pungency and natural antimicrobial properties of mustards. Additionally, mustard contains bioactive compounds such as glucosinolates, phytate, and phenolics, which are now being investigated for their potential in industrial applications and for their health benefits. Mustard seeds contain protein, oil, carbohydrates, and micronutrients.
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