Supplier: Ir64 parboiled rice, icumsa 45 sugar from brazil and sunflower refined oil from ukraine, all kinds of agro food products, edible oil, sunflower oil, brazil icumsa sugar, s30 sugar, pulses like moong dal or moong pulses, kidney beans, green mung, black beans, kidney beans or rajma, lentils, white urad dal, pigeon pea, chana dal or bengal gram, black eyed beans, peas, chickpeas, spices like cardamom, black pepper, cloves, cinnamon patta, cinnamon roll, star anise, bay leaf, dry chili, dry mace/javitri, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, shahi jeera, fenugreek seeds, dry fruits like walnuts, almonds, pistachio, cashew nuts, 1121 raw basmati rice, 1121 steam basmati rice, 1121 white sella basmati rice, 1121 golden sella basmati rice, 1509 white sella basmati rice, 1509 golden sella basmati rice, sugandha white sella basmati rice, ir 64 5% broken parboiled rice, ir 64 5% broken raw rice, ir64 25% broken raw rice, sona masuri rice 5% broken, jasmine rice, diabetic brown rice
Buyer: All kinds of agro food products, edible oil, brazil icumsa sugar, s30 sugar
Cinnamon, have an upright and woody shape, branching branch, rather heavy, dense, has a fine structure and fiber. Cinnamon is made by cutting the stems of cinnamon trees. The inner bark is then extracted and the woody parts removed. When it dries, it forms strips that curl into rolls, called cinnamon sticks.
Supplier: Main focus : garment , cinnamon , coconut
stock lot garment and fabric also agro products like raw spices specially cassia cinnamon and coconut. these are all 100 percent organically grown in indonesia and chemical free.
Services: Supplier, export & import
Supplier: Spices like cinnamon
Buyer: Spices , cinnamon products
Supplier: Cumin, turmeric, cardamom, chili, and coriander
Buyer: Cumin, turmeric, cardamom, chili, and coriander
Supplier: Oleoresin, black pepper, turmeric, clove, nutmeg, dehydrated garlic granules, garlic powder, sesame, cumin, coriander, yellow peas, green peas, millet, guar gum, psyllium husk, peanut, raisin, spices, capsicum oleoresin, paprika oleoresin, onion powder, dry red chilli, cassia, cinnamon, tamarind, wheat, oats, potato flakes, french fries, pigeon peas, green mung, red kidney beans, desiccated coconut, black pepper spent, black pepper pinhead, mustard seeds, chickpeas, ascorbic acid, soybean, soybean meal, yellow corn, flavour, peanut butter, butter, ghee, almond, breakfast cereals, frozen vegetables, essential oil
Services: Marketing
Cassia is an aromatic bark, similar to cinnamon, but differing in strength and quality. Its bark is darker, thicker and coarser, and the corky outer bark is often left on. The outer surface is rough and grayish brown, the inside barks is smoother and reddish-brown. It is less costly than cinnamon and is often sold ground as cinnamon. When buying as sticks, cinnamon rolls into a single quill while cassia is rolled from both sides toward the centre so that they end up resembling scrolls. Cassia buds. Cassia buds resemble cloves. They are the dried unripe fruits about 14 mm (1/2 in) long and half as wide. It is native to Burma and grown in China, Indo-China, the East and West Indies and Central America. One of the oldest spices known to man. It has a strong characteristic aroma and flavor. We may sometimes hear cinnamon refer to as cassia. This term is used to distinguish between the Southeast Asia and the Ceylon type of cinnamon. Almost all of the cinnamon consumed in the United States is derived from trees grown in Southeast Asia. Nowadays cinnamon is used to flavor bakery and dairy products, as well as drinks. Cassia-cinnamon is such a familiar and beloved spice it needs little introduction. A global favorite for its delicious aromatic flavor.
Ceylon cinnamon has been hailed as the "true cinnamon" or the "real cinnamon" that possesses outstanding health benefits especially for the diabetics and those challenged by obesity and high cholesterol issues. Unfortunately this cinnamon which is native to Sri Lanka and sourced from the plant Cinnamomum Zeylanicum A highly valued culinary and medicinal spice. Price can be up to 10 times more than the Cassia/Chinese cinnamon. Contains a small, negligible amount of coumarin, a naturally occurring blood-thinning substance. Recommended for regular use, e.g. for correcting blood sugar level. Thin and paper-like textured bark that forms multiple layers when rolled up. Tan brown in colour.