Neither. It is candy. The flavor of licorice however is based on an herb. Primarily the root of the Glycyrrhiza glabra, a legume native to Europe. However anise, fennel, and horehound also have a licorice like flavor. Some licorice candy has one of these herbs in it, but most now a days is artificial.
1,006,563 MGs
The Clarinet
The answer would be either Quik (the drink mix) or fish stick.
quick peppermint stickquick licorice stick
Look at a clarinet and you might eventually figure it out.
Yes they can, they will like it. Rats can eat about everything
i'd say about 21 inches.
Licorice is traditionally flavored with licorice root, which is native to both North America, Europe, and China. The licorice spice is actually the root of the plant in the Glycyrrhizagenus. It is normally found on the market in both a whole stick form and a shredded form. The whole stick form is more pure.Real licorice root tends to be expensive so except for Chinese licorice, which is cheaper, most of the flavoring in licorice candy is comprised of a combination of fennel seeds (improperly called "anise") and star anise (an Asian spice that comes from an evergreen). These are also the same flavorings often found in root beer. Licorice flavoring can also be faked by using certain varieties of basil.Although delicious, real licorice comes with a warning - large doses can cause hypertension and other heart problems, so use it sparingly.
Stormy Shores has: Performed in "Black Is Back" in 1993. Performed in "Black Babes in Heat" in 1993. Performed in "Rump-Shaker" in 1993. Performed in "Behind the Blackout" in 1993. Performed in "Harem 74" in 1998. Performed in "Licorice Stick" in 2001.
no, best to stick to watering with water :)
so food want stick
That's one for the imam. (I presume a "wonka nerds' rope" is something edible, like a licorice stick.)