Barilla will have to make its offer more palatable if it is to swallow up the German firm.
From the economist.com
Halogeton sativus is one of the plants from which barilla was made.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The resulting solution is boiled dry to obtain the finished barilla.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Barilla, the world's leading pasta-maker with headquarters north of the city, was one of them.
From the economist.com
Barilla opened a bread-and-pasta shop in Parma, Italy, in 1877.
From the forbes.com
Barilla says that it owns only just over 2% of Kamps, despite suspicions that it may have control of more.
From the economist.com
Barilla wasn't the only Italian stallion to make the top ten.
From the forbes.com
The soap's sodium compound came from the barilla plant.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Barilla now has a mini penne and farfalle pasta that works particularly well for just about any pasta salad.
From the freep.com
More examples
Saltwort: bushy plant of Old World salt marshes and sea beaches having prickly leaves; burned to produce a crude soda ash
Algerian plant formerly burned to obtain calcium carbonate
Barilla refers to several species of salt-tolerant ("halophyte") plants that, until the 19th Century, were the primary source of soda ash and hence (we now know) of sodium carbonate. The word "barilla" was also used directly to refer to the soda ash obtained from plant sources. ...
Barillas is a town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain.
Impure soda extracted from soap-wort (impure Na2CO3)
[from Spanish: Barrilla]: an impure alkali produced by burning dried kelp or seaweed, for use in the manufacture of soda, soap, and glass. ...