Organic raw herbs, 100% pure and natural essential oils, organic essential oils, herbal extracts, fragrant oils, indian spices, essential oil wooden boxes packaging, organic packaging, 100% natural jute promotional bags, organic cotton tote bags, jute grocery bags, jute shopping bags, ecological jute and cotton packaging, jute yoga mats, cotton bedsheets, hotel bed sheets, mango pulp, fruit pulp, fruit puree, psyllium husk, psyllium husk powder, totapuri and alphonso mango pulp , tomato paste, coconut and coconut products desiccated coconut , coconut powder, coconut milk powder, coconut sugar.
Caustic soda, cotton pulp sheet, tomato paste.
Gold, aluminum billets, aluminum ingots, copper, steel, quartz, diesel, jet fuel, d6, bitumen, petroleum coke, indonesian coal, cement, fertilizers, urea 46, sulphur, euro pallets, wooden pallets, tomato paste, frozen potatoes, frozen french fries, frozen chicken, sugar, salt, rock salt, rice, beet pellets, beet molasses, herbs & spices, frozen & fresh strawberries, frozen & fresh fruits, frozen & fresh vegetables.Manufacturing, trading, exporting, brokerage
Tomato paste, saffron, rock candy.
Aseptic Bags 36-38 Brix
Fruit pulp, cooking paste, curry paste, natural honey, peanut butter, fruit jam, instant flavored coffee, food colour and other food products.Manufacturer
Tomato paste, yellow corn, white corn, red onions, french fries.
Dear Mr/Mrs We are here by writing for interest in respect of a transaction regarding tomato paste in tin cans. We appreciate the time and energy you and your team can afford for us to discuss this opportunity. Transaction specifications Payment Terms: LC/TT Quantity: Min 20 fot container Specs: Brix 28-30, 36-38 Packagin: All type of packaging Incoterms: FOB, CIF Orgin: Egypt Inspections: SGS or similar. If you find this interesting, We're looking forward to hear from you and your team. Best wishes Shant Almediady
Tomato paste, totapuri mango pulp, alphonso mango pulp, white, pink guava pulp, white guava concentrate, totapuri mango concentrate, frozen vegetables, frozen sweet, baby corn, frozen whole tomatoes and ready to eat snacks, vegetable powders.
Deliciously tangy and one of the most highly prized natural foods in South Asia, the tamarind – the melodic name of which comes from the Persian "tamar-I-hind," meaning "date of India" – is gaining recognition and appreciation throughout the world. Said to be native to Africa, this exotic fruit grows on exceptionally tall trees of the fabaceae family, such as peas, beans, and other legumes, mostly in the warmer, dryer areas of Asia, Mexico, and India. Tamarind trees produce an abundance of long, curved, brown pods filled with small brown seeds, surrounded by a sticky pulp that dehydrates naturally to a sticky paste. The pods look a bit like huge, brown, overly mature green beans. After harvest, tamarinds are sometimes shelled in preparation for export. From there, they're often pressed into balls and layered with sugary water or syrup; sometimes they're salted. Processed tamarind products can be found in supermarkets, but remember that additives can alter the nutritional profile. It’s better to purchase tamarind when it's fresh and still in the pod. Refrigeration is the best way to preserve the freshness for up to several months.
Black Pepper Oleoresin Botanical: Piper nigrum Family: N.O. Piperaceae Hindi Name: Gol Mirch General Description: The best Pepper of commerce comes from Malabar. Pepper is mentioned by Roman writers in the fifth century. The plant can attain a height of 20 or more feet, but for commercial purposes it is restricted to 12 feet. The plant is propagated by cuttings and grown at the base of trees with a rough, prickly bark to support them. Between three or four years after planting they commence fruiting and their productiveness ends about the fifteenth year. The berries are collected as soon as they turn red and before they are quite ripe; they are then dried in the sun. Geographical Sources: Black pepper is native to Malabar, a region in the Western Coast of South India; part of the union state Kerala. It is also grown in Malaysia and Indonesia since about that time when it was found in the Malabar Coast. In the last decades of the 20th century, pepper production increased dramatically as new plantations were founded in Thailand, Vietnam, China and Sri Lanka. The most important producers are India and Indonesia, which together account for about 50% of the whole production volume History/Region of Origin: In South India wild, and in Cochin-China; also cultivated in East and West Indies, Malay Peninsula, Malay Archipelago, Siam, Malabar, etc. Varieties -> in trade, the pepper grades are identified by their origin. In India -> The most important Indian grades are Malabar and Tellicherry (Thalassery). The Malabar grade is regular black pepper with a slightly greenish hue, while Tellicherry is a special product. Both Indian black peppers, but especially the Telicherry grade, are very aromatic and pungent. In the past, Malabar pepper was also traded under names like Goa or Aleppi. Cochin is the pepper trade center in India. In South East Asia, the most reputated proveniences for black pepper are Sarawak in Malaysia and Lampong from Sumatra/Indonesia. Both produce small-fruited black pepper that takes on a greyish colour during storage; both have a less-developed aroma, but Lampong pepper is pretty hot. Sarawak pepper is mild and often described fruity. Description: Oleoresin Black Pepper is the natural extract of dried tender berries of Piper Nigrum Linn of family Piperaceae. Manufacturing Process: It is obtained by the solvent extraction of Black Pepper and the solvent traces are removed by distilling it in vacua at controlled temperature. Physical Appearance: It is a yellowish brown viscous liquid with pungent slightly biting aroma of Black Pepper.