Supplier: All type clothes, urea, all type agriculture and food items, all personal and entertainment items, all industrial and automotive items, all construction household and furnishing, all computers electronics and electrical, handicraft, items, npk, fertilizers t shirt, blanket,dry fruits, animal feeds, towel, bedsheets, toys, all grocery, copper wire scrap, copper ore concentrate, zinc ore concentrate, lead concentrate, fly ash, a4 paper, a3 paper, craft paper, occ, ldpe, hdpe , pvc resin, petroleum products, jp54, jet a1, crude oil, blco , biodiesel, diesel, fuel, coal, d2, petcock, pulses, mustard oil, spices , sanitizer, gloves, medical products, cement, core sand, old ships lng, lpg, all groceries items, food products, hms1 and hms2, fish, chicken feet, chicken paws, agri & food processing agriculture products, fertilizers, seeds, farm products grains, fruits, vegetables, river sands, aggregates, pvc electrical wire, rice, charcoal, wheat flour
Services: Export, import, merchant export import
Buyer: All metals, minerals, petroleum products, food products and paper products
Supplier: Cotton yarn, cotton and poly cotton fabrics, recycled yarn , grs certified , shoddy , wool waste , bed sheets, towels, kitchen towels, knitted bed sheets , jersey sheets, woven bedding, spinning waste, rice, sugar, cement, clinker, frozen chicken, frozen beef, edible oils, palm oil, wheat, soybean, corn, barley, bitumen, copper cathode, urea, aluminum ingot, sulfur, coal, ores, dap, pet coke, fertilizers, npk, base oil, petroleum products , mattress cover , pillow , micro fibre bed sheets , quilt , pink salt , himalayan salt
Services: Sourcing
The Masoor Dal lentils can be split or whole, and both types are used in Indian cuisine. The split and husked red lentils are called Dhuli Masoor Dal in Hindi. Split and husked lentils have an orange-pink color. However, the whole Masoor Dal with the husks have a dark brown color and thus called Brown Lentils.
Masoor dal (Lens culinaris), also called red lentil, is a staple food in every Indian household. It is widely cultivated in warm, tropical and temperate zones for its edible and nutritious seeds. In addition, it is an important source of protein for the vegetarian population in developing countries.