Raisin varieties depend on the type of grape used, and are made in a variety of sizes and colors including green, black, blue, purple, yellow. Seedless varieties include the Sultana (also known as Thompson Seedless in the USA) and Flame grapes. Raisins are typically sun-dried, but may also be water-dipped, or dehydrated. "Golden raisins" are made from Sultanas, treated with sulfur dioxide (SO2), and flame-dried to give them their characteristic colo.
Uses:
Raisins are dried grapes. They are produced in many regions of the world, such as Armenia, the United States, Australia, Chile, Colombia, Argentina, Macedonia, Mexico,
Greece, Syria, Turkey, Georgia, India, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, China, Afghanistan, Togo, Jamaica, South Africa, Southern and Eastern Europe. Raisins may be eaten raw or
used in cooking, baking and brewing.
Botanical Name: Vitis Vinitera
Family Name: Grapes
Commericial Part: Fruit
Raisin varieties depend on the type of grape used, and are made in a variety of sizes and colors including green, black, blue, purple, yellow. Seedless varieties include the Sultana (also known as Thompson Seedless in the USA) and Flame grapes. Raisins are typically sun-dried, but may also be water-dipped, or dehydrated. "Golden raisins" are made from Sultanas, treated with sulfur dioxide (SO2), and flame-dried to give them their characteristic colo.
Uses:
Raisins are dried grapes. They are produced in many regions of the world, such as Armenia, the United States, Australia, Chile, Colombia, Argentina, Macedonia, Mexico,
Greece, Syria, Turkey, Georgia, India, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, China, Afghanistan, Togo, Jamaica, South Africa, Southern and Eastern Europe. Raisins may be eaten raw or
used in cooking, baking and brewing.
Botanical Name: Vitis Vinitera
Family Name: Grapes
Commericial Part: Fruit
Raisin varieties depend on the type of grape used, and are made in a variety of sizes and colors including green, black, blue, purple, yellow. Seedless varieties include the
Sultana (also known as Thompson Seedless in the USA) and Flame grapes. Raisins are typically sun-dried, but may also be water-dipped, or dehydrated. "Golden raisins" are
made from Sultanas, treated with sulfur dioxide (SO2), and flame-dried to give them their characteristic colo.
Uses:
Raisins are dried grapes. They are produced in many regions of the world, such as Armenia, the United States, Australia, Chile, Colombia, Argentina, Macedonia, Mexico,
Greece, Syria, Turkey, Georgia, India, Iran, Pakistan, Iraq, China, Afghanistan, Togo, Jamaica, South Africa, Southern and Eastern Europe. Raisins may be eaten raw or
used in cooking, baking and brewing.
Botanical Name: Vitis Vinitera
Family Name: Grapes
Commericial Part: Fruit
A staple in Southern European food, basil has become one of the most widely used spices in the world. It adds a delicately sweet flavor and warm aroma to savory dishes, and
naturally combines with garlic, capers and tomatoes.
Uses:
Today, basil’s flavor and aroma still rules in the Mediterranean, where its mild flavor often combines with oregano to enhance almost any tomato-based dish. Fields of the
large-leaved annual dot the landscape of the region.
Botanical Name: Ocimum basilicum
Family Name: Tulsi
Commericial Part: Seeds
Free from any kind of contamination or foreign particles like dust, shell pieces, weightless seeds, stones and damaged seeds, our Safflower Seeds are sourced from eminent vendors of finest growing regions. Usually grown as a Rabi crop, this important oil-seed crop has long and stout taper root and spirally arranged, dark green and glossy leaves. Slightly bitter in taste, it has an appearance of more or less like the seeds of orange..
Uses:
Quality edible oil containing polyunsaturated fats
Used as ingredient in animal feed.
Sesbania is a legume also known as a "Swamp Pea". It is great for duckmarshes and quail. Sesbania makes a good cover for ducks and upland game birds, growing as high as 8-12 feet. It is one of the finest quality quail foods available. Dove and wild turkey also have a craving for Sesbania. Grows best in moist, heavy lands though will grow im
most soils.
Uses:
The major use of Sesbania crop has been as fodder for livestock and green.
Botanical Name: Brassica nigra
Family Name: Sesbania
Commericial Part: Seeds
Niger seed comes from a plant called Guizotia abyssinica which is an annual herb grown not only for its seed but its edible oil too. It was cultivated in Ethiopia but is now
found growing in other parts of Africa and India. The seed is technically a fruit known as a achene and it is often sold as bird seed
Uses:
Niger seed has been used for many years in North America as a bird food, particularly for gold finches. It is rich in oils and other nutrients essential for birds and is high in
calories. By putting out niger seed you will attract a wide variety of birds to your garden.
Botanical Name: Hyoscyamus
Family Name: Niger
Commericial Part: Seeds
In India, White maize is emerging as third most important crop after rice and wheat. Maize has its significance as a source of a large number of industrial products besides its
uses as human food and animal feed. Diversified uses of maize for maize corn, starch industry, corn oil production, baby corns, popcorns, etc., and potential for exports has added to the demand of maize all over world.
Uses:
Diversified uses of maize for maize corn, starch industry, corn oil production, baby corns, popcorns, etc., and potential for exports has added to the demand of maize all over
world.
Botanical Name: Cicer arietinum
Family Name: Maize
Commericial Part: Seeds
In India, yellow maize is emerging as third most important crop after rice and wheat. Maize has its significance as a source of a large number of industrial products besides its uses as human food and animal feed. Diversified uses of maize for maize corn, starch industry, corn oil production, baby corns, popcorns, etc., and potential for exports has added to the demand of maize all over world
Uses:
Diversified uses of maize for maize corn, starch industry, corn oil production, baby corns, popcorns, etc., and potential for exports has added to the demand of maize all over
world.
Botanical Name: Cicer arietinum
Family Name: Maize
Commericial Part: Seeds
A glabours much-branched deciduous shrub with 4-gonous lateral branches often ending in spines; leaves simple, opposite, entire, laceolate, petioles very short or absent; flowers white, or rose-colored, fragrant, in large terminal pyramidal panicled cymes,stamens 8, in 4 pair inserted on the calyx tube; fruits globose capsules, tipped with the
style and supported by the persistent calyx, seeds numerous, smooth, pyramidal.
Uses:
The roots are bitter, refrigerant, depurative, diuretic, emmenagogue, abortifacient and trichogenous, and are useful in burning sensation, dispsia, leprosy, skin disease,
strangury amenorrhoea, dysmenorrhoea, and premature graying of hair.
Botanical Name: Lawsonia Inermis
Family Name: Lythraceae
Commericial Part: Leaves