Table salt.
Chair, armchair, antique reproduction, bedrooms, dinning rooms, desk, commode, chandeliers, cabinet.
Antique style furniture like chair, table and dining table.
Refined iodized food grade table iodine salt.
Furniture And Carpenter Roofing Nails.
Office Furniture Like Office Chair Cabinets.
Linen tablecloth.
Hotel furniture like beds sofa and chairs.
Furniture like table, chair and corner table.
Salt like table salt, iodized salt,block salt.
Wooden dinning table.
Furniture like sofa.
Hotel And Restaurant Furniture Like Chairs, Tables..
Salt Like Sea Salt, Rock Salt, Table Salt..
Salt Like Sea Salt, Rock Salt Table Salt.
Furniture like sofa set, wardrobe and chairs.
Recliner Sofa And Chairs And Fabrics.
Why do people eat sweet potatoes? Because they are sweet! A new variety, Evangeline, just released by the LSU AgCenter, will satisfy those who want a really sweet sweet potato. What makes Evangeline so special is its sugar profile with twice as much sucrose as Beauregard, another widely grown LSU AgCenter-developed variety. Evangeline does, however, have less maltose, a sugar produced during cooking. But this is a great tradeoff. People perceive sucrose (table sugar) as being much sweeter than maltose. Not only is Evangeline sweeter out of the oven, it also makes a great microwaved sweet potato. AgCenter research has shown it has twice the sucrose content and similar levels of maltose as Beauregard when microwaved. Evangeline also has excellent processing qualities, and the deep orange flesh color has wide appeal.
Tomato, (Solanum lycopersicum), flowering plant of the nightshade family (Solanaceae), cultivated extensively for its edible fruits. Labelled as a vegetable for nutritional purposes, tomatoes are a good source of vitamin C and the phytochemical lycopene. The fruits are commonly eaten raw in salads, served as a cooked vegetable, used as an ingredient of various prepared dishes, and pickled. Additionally, a large percentage of the world’s tomato crop is used for processing; products include canned tomatoes, tomato juice, ketchup, puree, paste, and “sun-dried” tomatoes or dehydrated pulp. Tomato plants are generally much branched, spreading 60–180 cm (24–72 inches) and somewhat trailing when fruiting, but a few forms are compact and upright. Leaves are more or less hairy, strongly odorous, pinnately compound, and up to 45 cm (18 inches) long. The five-petaled flowers are yellow, 2 cm (0.8 inch) across, pendant, and clustered. Fruits are berries that vary in diameter from 1.5 to 7.5 cm (0.6 to 3 inches) or more. They are usually red, scarlet, or yellow, though green and purple varieties do exist, and they vary in shape from almost spherical to oval and elongate to pear-shaped. Each fruit contains at least two cells of small seeds surrounded by jellylike pulp.