Supplier: Jasmine rice/long grain white rice, black pepper, chili peppers, dry mango.
Services: International trade
Buyer: Icumsa 45 sugar
Supplier: Rice, agricultural products, premium rice, fresh vegetables, seasonal fruits, dry chili, red chili powder, and an array of processed foods like dehydrated vegetables, plants, including flowering plants, border shrubs, palm trees, ornamental plants, and fruit bearing plant, Butterscotch Nuts, Bydagi Red Chilli, Chilli Seeds, Dehydrated Carrot Flakes Powder, Dehydrated Fruit Powder, Dehydrated Garlic Flakes Powder, Dehydrated Leaves And Herbs, Dehydrated Onion Flakes Powder, Dehydrated Potato Flakes Powder, Dry Chilli Guntur Sannam, Endo Dry Red Chilli, Parboiled Rice, Premium Chilli Powder, Red Pepper Flakes, S 273 Wrinkled Red Chilli, Sona Masoori Rice, Teja Dry Red Chilli
Services: Exports
Ready to cook spices are made to ease the daily cooking of Indian recipes while not even needed to add salt. All the recipies are prepared and ready to offer a fresh Indian cuisine.
Supplier: Rice, vibrant vegetables, and luscious fruits, all cultivated with care and dedication, aromatic spices, farm fresh eggs and top quality fish, beef, and mutton, wholesome grains and nutritious dry fruits
Supplier: Basmati rice, non basmati rice, spices, dals, dry fruits, herbal, green vegetables
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.