High Natural food grade sucralose Sweeteners for food and beverage industry Essential details Storage Type: Cool and dry place Specification: Sucralose Shelf Life: 2 year, 24 Months Manufacturer: Global Ingredients: Sweeteners Content: Sucralose Instruction for use: Use as appropriate CAS No.: 56038-13-2 Other Names: Sucralose MF: C12H19Cl3O8 EINECS No.: 259-952-2 FEMA No.: NA Type: Sweeteners, Sweeteners Model Number: Sucralose Description: White crystalline powder Application: Food Additive Standard: FOOD GRADE Assay: 98%-102% Packing: 25KG/BAG Sample: Available Storage: Cool Dry Place Testing Item Standard Result Assay Content 98.1102.0% 99.78% Loss on Drying 2% 0.1% Specific Rotation at 20â +84.0 +87.5 +85.7 Ignited Residue 0.7% 0.10% Hydrolysis products 0.1% Complies Methanol 0.1% Undetected Heavy Metals mg/kg 10mg/kg â?¤10mg/kg Arsenic(As) mg/kg 3mg/k Undetected Taste and Odor No abnormal taste or odor Passes test Lead 1 mg/kg Undetected Fe mg/kg â?¤10mg/kg 10mg/kg Related substances 0.5%
Spice Secrets - Onion Chutney (Pack of 10 - 20 g each) Price : 100.00 Remember your Grandma grinding the ingredients on the stone grinder and your Mother listening to her intently? Thant's how recipes were passed down. And while the stone grinders may have all but disappeared from the kitchens, the secret recepies are still intact in ours. Every lick and every dip of our pickles and chutneys is a trip down memory lane.
Fennel is an aromatic and flavorful herb that has several culinary as well as medicinal uses. If it is not in your kitchen cupboard right now, you’ll want to put it on your grocery list and make it a household staple after learning more about it. In addition to its popular use as a breath freshener, it helps relieve a number of ailments and facilitates better health due to its stomachic, carminative, antispasmodic, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, expectorant, diuretic, emmenagogue, depurative, anticarcinogenic and antioxidant properties.
Black cumin is a part of the buttercup family and the seeds are dark, thin, and crescent-shaped when whole. The seeds have been used for many centuries in the Middle East, the Mediterranean and India. Today, black cumin seeds are used as a seasoning spice in different cuisines across the world due to their nutty flavor. Besides their culinary uses, black cumin seeds also have a wealth of important health benefits and are one of the most cherished medicinal seeds in history. The seeds of the black cumin plant contain over 100 chemical compounds, including some yet to be identified. In addition to what is believed to be the primary active ingredient, crystalline nigellone, black cumin seeds contain: thymoquinone, beta sitosterol, myristic acid, palmitic acid, palmitoleic acid, stearic acid, oleic acid, linoleic acid, linolenic acid, arachidonic acid, protein, vitamin B1, vitamin B2, vitamin B3, folic acid, calcium, iron, copper, zinc, and phosphorous.
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.
The name khichiyu or khichu is derived from the ductile nature of the dough. (Khinch in Indic languages means to pull.) khichu (Gujarati dish) Type. Snack; as dough for papad. Khichiya papad is a thin Indian wafer, sometimes described as a cracker or flatbread. They are made of rice flour flavoured with green chillies, salt and cumin seeds. They are dried rice chips studded with Indian spices which can be grilled or deep fried.
Sesame, cashew nuts, coffee, cocoa, shea nuts, shea butter, soybeans, organic soybeans, crude soybean oil, organic soybean oil, refined soybean oil, soybean lecithin, soybean meal, gasoil en590 Diesel 10ppm, natural liquified gas.