Indian pea

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Name Variation

 * grass pea
 * blue sweet pea
 * chickling vetch
 * Indian vetch
 * white vetch
 * almorta or alverjón (Spain)
 * cicerchia (Italy)
 * guaya (Ethiopia)
 * khesari (India)

About Indian pea
Consumption of this pulse in Italy is limited to some areas in the middle part of the country, and is steadily declining.

Flour made from grass peas (Spanish:almorta) is the main ingredient for the gachas manchegas or gachas de almorta. Accompaniments for the dish vary throughout La Mancha. This is an ancient Manchego cuisine staple, generally consumed during the cold winter months. The dish is generally eaten directly out of the pan it was cooked in, using either a spoon or a simple slice of bread. This dish is commonly consumed immediately after removing it from the fire, being careful not to burn one's lips or tongue.

Grass pea flour is exceedingly difficult to obtain outside of Castile-La Mancha, especially in its pure form. Commercially available almorta flour is mixed with wheat flour due to the fact that grass peas are toxic if consumed in significantly large quantities for prolongued periods of time.