The Tang dynasty (A.D. 618-907) had its capital at the eastern end of the Silk Road. During the Tang dynasty China became an expansive, cosmopolitan empire. The capital city of Chang'an or with its modern name Xi'an, became the world's largest city. It attracted traders and pilgrims from all over the world. Foreign influences enriched Chinese art and culture. Stimulated by contact with India and the Middle East, the empire saw a flowering of creativity in many fields. The Tang Dynasty was the golden age of poetry, literature and art. The sculptural pottery art, often decorated with sancai three-colored lead glaze is still and forever linked to this age of which the Bactrian horse figures are the most famous and sought after.
JH GLASS pattern glass is from 3mm-12mm , all is temperable quality , mainly used for glass table , cabinet, window,door ,indoor partition and curtain wall .
the main pattern including nashiji,mistlite,karatachi,moru,hitchcross,chinchilla,watercube,rain,bamboo ,etc.
The pottery stone ore shown in the earlier photograph is a particularly high-quality special-grade material among our pottery stones. Pottery stones are generally finely crushed, and used as the material for ceramics, bone china, and sanitary ware (toilets, sinks, etc.).
Products are shipped out from our mine in sizes of <= 10 mm obtained by roughly crushing the stones. They are shipped in bulk or by filling flexible containers using large trucks.
Since 2010 we are engaged in trading & exports of ceramic products, very high Quality of Zirconium Silicates & Zirconium Flours for ceramics.
We mostly supply Zirconium 2, Zirconium 5 and Zirconium Flour 325 mesh to ceramic industries.
Application Of Zirconium Silicates :
Opacifier for pottery and porcelain glazes ,wall tiles, roofing tiles, sanitary ware etc
Frits, Glazes & Enamels.
Admixture for ceramic body. (Improvement of property and Opacification of color)
Like wax candles, Rouseki (Pyrophyllite) is white and semi-transparent, and has a waxy texture when touched. It is very brittle, and tends to crack largely along the stone joints. Up close, this stone looks grayish white, but may look blue from a distance.
The ore looks so similar to pottery stone ore that they cannot be distinguished. But there is a difference in their texture, color, and how they crack, and with experience, their differences become more visible. They not only look and feel different, but their applications and properties also differ significantly.
It's used as Firebricks, crucibles, glazes, fire-resistant powders, etc.
The foundry-grade bentonite powder is used as a bonding material in the preparation of moulding sand for the production of iron, steel, and non-ferrous casting. Sodium Bentonite is the preferred binding agent for use in the bonding of metals and foundry sands, although calcium Bentonite enhances foundry sandâ??s flow ability and figures in the manufacture of nonferrous mouldings.
Drilling Grade (API Grades, OCMA)
Drilling-grade bentonite is a naturally occurring clay containing the clay minerals of smectite. It can also contain accessory minerals, such as quartz, mica, feldspar, and calcite. The Drilling Grade Bentonite Powder is used as a mud constituent for oil and water well drilling. Its roles are mainly to seal the borehole walls, remove drill cuttings, and lubricate the cutting head. Our Drilling Grade Bentonite Powder has high swelling and good colloidal nature, which can increase the viscosity of suspension in the drilling mud and also can increase the lubrication of drilling, as well as for the rig-freeing agent.
Piling Grade
Bentonite slurry is one of the most common excavation fluid used in constructing diaphragm walls. The gel strength and viscosity properties of the bentonite clay allow for cutting suspension and removal. Piling Grade Bentonite Powder is used traditionally as a support and lubricant agent in walls and foundations, tunnelling, and horizontal drilling. Viscosity and plasticity play a very important role. Bentonite slurry walls are used in construction, where the slurry wall is a trench filled with a thick colloidal mixture of Bentonite and water.
Cattle Feed Grade
Our Feed Grade Bentonite is Natural & selected from affluent Mines of Kutch. This Bentonite is used as an animal feed supplement, as a palletizing aid in the production of feed pallets, as well as a flow ability aid. It slows the passage of feed through the digestive system increasing the uptake of nutrients. Bentonite has an affinity for some of the active elements of toxin products formed by bacteria in the digestive tract, and its application in feed allows more rapid weight gain of livestock.
Product name: Lupin Legume
Botanical name: Lupinus genus
Family: Fabaceae
HS Code: 120999
Origin: Egypt
Packing: 25 kg pp bags
Cultivation: Common (conventional) cultivation
Lupin is also called lupine beans which is the yellow legume seeds.
Lupin is traditionally consumed as a rare snack. And it taste bitter unless you wash it well with water.
The ancient Egyptians were the first who use Lupins, as it back to the 12th Dynasty, the earliest archaeological report. Lupin seeds are also found in the tombs of many Egyptian pharaohs of the 22nd dynasty.
A quantity of it was found in the Hawara tombs in Fayoum.
There are two kinds of lupins, bitter lupins which have large amounts of toxic alkaloids, and sweet lupins which contain smaller toxic alkaloid amounts.
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Lupin is also called lupine beans which is the yellow legume seeds.
Lupin is traditionally consumed as rare snacks. And it tastes bitter unless you washed it well with water.
The ancient Egyptians were the first who used Lupins, as it backs to the 12th Dynasty, the earliest archaeological reported. Lupins seeds are also found in the tombs of many Egyptian pharos of the 22nd dynasty.
A quantity of it was found in the Hawara tombs in Fayoum.
There are two kinds of luptins, bitter lubtins which has large amounts of toxic alkaloids and sweet luptins which contain smaller toxic alkaloids amounts.
FOR MORE INFO PLS CONTACT US NOW (24/7)
Product name: Dried Lupin
Botanical name: Lupinus genus
Family: Fabaceae
Cultivation: Common
Origin: Egypt
Color: creamy color.
Packing: 25 kg bags
HS Code: 120999
What is the Lupin?
Lupin is the yellow legume seed of the genus Lupinus.
They are traditionally eaten as a pickled snack food, primarily in the Mediterranean basin, Latin America, and North Africa.
The most ancient evidence of lupin is from ancient Egypt, dating back to the 22nd century BC.
The bitter variety of the beans is high in alkaloids and is extremely bitter unless rinsed methodically. Low alkaloid cultivars called sweet lupins have been bred, and are increasingly planted
The History and distribution
The earliest archaeological reports on lupins are referred to the Twelfth Dynasty of Egyptian Pharaohs. In their tombs, already domesticated in those times, were discovered.
Seven seeds of this species were also retrieved in the tombs of this dynasty dating back to the 22nd century BC.
They are the most ancient evidence of lupin in the Mediterranean.
Lupin is commonly used in Egypt (known by the name "termes") and is eaten by the Egyptians as a snack anytime during the Sham Elnesim festival, which is a national festival in Egypt whose history goes back to ancient Egyptian times. Lupin was also used by the Ancient Greeks and Romans.
Termes / Lupin / Lupin Beans
Botanical name: Lupinus genus
Family: Fabaceae
Common names: Lupin, Lupine, Lupine beans, Lupini beans, Lupin beans, terms beans, and yellow legume seeds.
Cultivation: Common
Origin: Egypt
Color: creamy color.
Packing: 25 kg bags
Species: bitter/sweet
Hs Code: 12099900
Lupin in brief:
- Lupin is traditionally consumed as a rare snack. And it tastes bitter unless you wash it well with water.
- The ancient Egyptians were the first who use Lupins, as back to the 12th Dynasty, the earliest archaeological report. Lupin seeds are also found in the tombs of many Egyptian pharos of the 22nd dynasty as well a quantity of it was found in the Hawara tombs in Fayoum.
- There are two kinds of Lupins, bitter Lubin's which has large amounts of toxic alkaloids, and sweet Lupins which contain smaller toxic alkaloids amounts.
- Lupini beans packed in jars with brine such as pickles and olives. They are eaten with or without their skin.
- A Termis is the name used in Egypt to call for Lupin. It is consumed as a snack and can cock at home or sold by street vendors.
- Many European countries grind Lupin beans to become flour and use them as an alternative to wheat flour. But in Australia Lupin flour is added to wheat flour in order to promote it and get food with a creamy color.
Lupin / Lupin Beans
Botanical name: Lupinus genus
Family: Fabaceae
Common names: Lupin, Lupine, Lupine beans, Lupini beans, Lupin beans, terms beans, and yellow legume seeds.
Cultivation: Common
Origin: Egypt
Color: creamy color.
Packing: 25 kg bags
Species: bitter/sweet
Hs Code: 1209990030
Lupin in brief:
- Lupin is traditionally consumed as a rare snack. And it tastes bitter unless you wash it well with water.
- The ancient Egyptians were the first who use Lupins, as back to the 12th Dynasty, the earliest archaeological report. Lupin seeds are also found in the tombs of many Egyptian pharos of the 22nd dynasty as well a quantity of it was found in the Hawara tombs in Fayoum.
- There are two kinds of Lupins, bitter Lubin's which has large amounts of toxic alkaloids, and sweet Lupins which contain smaller toxic alkaloids amounts.
- Lupini beans packed in jars with brine such as pickles and olives. They are eaten with or without their skin.
- A Termis is the name used in Egypt to call for Lupin. It is consumed as a snack and can cock at home or sold by street vendors.
- Many European countries grind Lupin beans to become flour and use them as an alternative to wheat flour. But in Australia Lupin flour is added to wheat flour in order to promote it and get food with a creamy color.
Lupin beans
Botanical name: Lupinus genus
Family: Fabaceae
Common names: Lupin, Lupine, Lupine beans, Lupini beans, Lupin beans, terms beans, and yellow legume seeds.
Cultivation: Common
Origin: Egypt
Color: creamy color.
Packing: 25 kg bags
Species: bitter/sweet
Hs Code: 1209990030
Lupin in brief:
- Lupin is traditionally consumed as a rare snack. And it tastes bitter unless you washed it well with water.
- The ancient Egyptians were the first who use Lupins, as back to the 12th Dynasty, the earliest archaeological report. Lupins seeds are also found in the tombs of many Egyptian pharos of the 22nd dynasty as well a quantity of it was found in the Hawara tombs in Fayoum.
- There are two kinds of Lupins, bitter Lubin's which has large amounts of toxic alkaloids, and sweet Lupins which contain smaller toxic alkaloids amounts.
- Lupini beans packed in jars with brine such as pickles and olives. They are eaten with or without their skin.
- A Termis is the name used in Egypt to call for Lupin. It is consumed as a snack and can cock at home or sold by street vendors.
- Many European countries grind Lupin beans to become flour and used them as an alternative to wheat flour. But in Australia Lupin flour is added to wheat flour in order to promote it and get food with a creamy color.
Lupin or lupini are the yellow legume seeds of the genus Lupinus.
They are traditionally eaten as a pickled snack food, primarily in the Mediterranean basin (L. albus), Latin America (L. mutabilis) and North Africa (L. angustifolius). The most ancient evidence of lupin is from ancient Egypt, dating back to the 22nd century BC.
History and distribution
The earliest archaeological reports on lupins are referred to the Twelfth Dynasty of Egyptian Pharaohs. In their tombs, seeds of Lupinus digitatus Forsk., already domesticated in those times, were discovered. Seven seeds of this species were also retrieved in the tombs of this dynasty dated back to the 22nd century BC. They are the most ancient evidence of lupin in the Mediterranean.
Lupin is commonly used in Egypt (known by the name "termes") and is eaten by the Egyptians as snack anytime as during the Sham Elnesim festival, which is a national festival in Egypt whose history goes back to ancient Egyptian times.
Lupini were used by the Romans, who spread their cultivation throughout the Roman Empire. Today, lupini are most commonly found in Mediterranean countries and their former colonies, especially in Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, and Brazil, and across the Middle East.
The Andean American variety of this lupin, Lupinus mutabilis, was domesticated by pre-Incan inhabitants of present-day Peru. Rock imprints of seeds and leaves, dated around 6th and 7th century BC, are exhibited in the National Museum of Lima.
It was a food widespread during the Incan Empire. Lupins were also used by Native Americans in North America, e.g. the Yavapai people
FOR MORE INFO & ORDERS CALL THE SPECIALIST NOW (24/7)
Lupin in brief:
- Lupin is traditionally consumed as a rare snack. And it tastes bitter unless you wash it well with water.
- The ancient Egyptians were the first who use Lupins, as back to the 12th Dynasty, the earliest archaeological report. Lupin seeds are also found in the tombs of many Egyptian pharos of the 22nd dynasty as well a quantity of it was found in the Hawara tombs in Fayoum.
- There are two kinds of Lupins, bitter Lubin's which has large amounts of toxic alkaloids, and sweet Lupins which contain smaller toxic alkaloids amounts.
- Lupini beans packed in jars with brine such as pickles and olives. They are eaten with or without their skin.
- A Termis is the name used in Egypt to call for Lupin. It is consumed as a snack and can cock at home or sold by street vendors.
- Many European countries grind Lupin beans to become flour and use them as an alternative to wheat flour. But in Australia Lupin flour is added to wheat flour in order to promote it and get food with a creamy color.
Product Name Rosemary Rosmarinus Officinalis
Botanical name Rosmarinus officinalis
HS Code 12119094
Origin Egypt
Rosemary leaves
As a medicinal herb it has long been recommended for strengthening the brain and memory The herb contains substances that are useful for improving digestion and increasing circulation
In cooking rosemary is used as a seasoning in a variety of dishes such as soups casseroles salads and stews Use rosemary with chicken and other poultry game lamb pork steaks and fish especially oily fish It also goes well with grains mushrooms onions peas potatoes and spinach
History
Illustration from an Italian herbal circa 1500
The first mention of rosemary is found on cuneiform stone tablets as early as 5000 BCE after which Egyptians used it for embalming corpses starting in 3500 BCE There is no further mention of rosemary until the ancient Greeks and Romans Pliny the Elder 2379 CE wrote about it in The Natural History20 as did Pedanius Dioscorides c 40 CE to c 90 CE a Greek botanist amongst other things He talked about rosemary in his most famous writing De Materia Medica one of the most influential herbal books in history
The herb later made its way east to China and was naturalized there as early as 220 CE during the late Han dynasty
FOR MORE INFO ORDER CONTACT THE SPECIALIST NOW 247
Rosemary leaves
Rosemary is an aromatic evergreen shrub with leaves similar to hemlock needles. It is native to the Mediterranean regions
but is reasonably hardy in cool climates. Special cultivars like 'Arp' can withstand winter temperatures down to about â??20 �°C (â??4 �°F).
It can withstand droughts, surviving a severe lack of water for lengthy periods.
It is considered a potentially invasive species and its seeds are often difficult to start, with a low germination rate and relatively slow growth, but the plant can live as long as 35 years.
The plant flowers in spring and summer in temperate climates, but the plants can be in constant bloom in warm climates; flowers are white, pink, purple or deep blue.
Rosemary also has a tendency to flower outside its normal flowering season; it has been known to flower as late as early December, and as early as mid-February (in the northern hemisphere)
History
Illustration from an Italian herbal, circa 1500
The first mention of rosemary is found on cuneiform stone tablets as early as 5000 BCE, after which Egyptians used it for embalming corpses starting in 3500 BCE. There is no further mention of rosemary until the ancient Greeks and Romans. Pliny the Elder (23â??79 CE) wrote about it in The Natural History,[20] as did Pedanius Dioscorides (c. 40 CE to c. 90 CE), a Greek botanist (amongst other things). He talked about rosemary in his most famous writing, De Materia Medica, one of the most influential herbal books in history.
The herb later made its way east to China and was naturalized there as early as 220 CE, during the late Han dynasty.
FOR MORE INFO & ORDER CONTACT THE SPECIALIST NOW (24/7)
Product name: Faba Beans
Botanical name: Vicia Faba L.
Family name: Fabaceae
Origin: Egypt
Packing: 25 kg bags
HS Code: 071350
Description:
Vicia faba has many nutritious seeds and pods. Millions of people around the world are eating it.
Vicia faba which is also known as faba bean or broad bean, is back to the legume family, Leguminosae (also known as Fabaceae) that is rich with protein because it can fix nitrogen from the air through a symbiotic relationship with bacteria housed in root nodules.
Vicia faba is a rigidly upstanding plant whereas its tall is 0.5-1.8m, with a strong rod of a square cross-section. The leaf's color is distinct glaucous grey-green and varies between 10-25 cm long
Culinary uses:
Fava bean was the main dish for old Mediterranean civilizations, especially for the Romans and Ancient Greeks.
in China, Malaysia, Colombia, Peru (habas saladas), Guatemala (habas), Mexico (habas con chile), Gilan (North of Iran), and Thailand (where their name means "open-mouth nut") they fry the beans till the skin becomes open ten put salt and/ or spice and it is considered there as a savory, crunchy snack
The fava bean is known in some Arab countries as ful medames and they eat it as breakfast
Fava beans are major in Latin American dishes, also in central Mexico; mashed fava beans are known as filling for many corn flour-based antojito snacks such as tlacoyos. In Colombia, it is used in vegetable soups. Many Latin countries consider dried and salted fava beans a snack
In Egypt, Fava beans (Arabic: �?�?�?â?? â??f�«l pronounced [fu�?l]) are a famous food and traditional dish in the Egyptian diet whether for the rich or poor. They cook them in different ways may be shelled and then dried, they buy it dry and then cook it after adding water to it in very low for several heat hours, etc. After that, it is served with bread as breakfast after adding some spices like salt, cumin, and oil to mashed cooked beans it is called ful medames. Not only do the Egyptians eat Fava Beans but also they use them as an important ingredient of Falafel.
The ancient Egyptian beans
Beans have good smell flowers from which they extract fragrance, they are used drenched as a treatment for
Beans have been found in a tomb in the era of the twelfth Dynasty (2000-1788) BC
They also used it as dressing for the knee to kill the pain, Also, they used it as creme for glands.
Indian handicraft products
1. Handmade cotton items like hand pouch purses, laptop bags.
2. Wooden crafts for home decor, kitchen decor.
3. Hand block printed cotton fabrics
4. blue pottery products like bowl, jar, vase, plates, tray, coaster, diyas.
Turmeric Oil renowned for its medicinal flavoring and coloring properties is a yelloworange elixir extracted from the rhizomatous roots Aromas Oils following stringent USFDA standards ensures the extraction process adheres to safety guidelines making it suitable for general use
Botany
Turmeric a member of the Zingiberaceae family is native to South Asia This rhizomatous perennial plant exhibits a slightly bitter and peppery tang with a mustardlike aroma The rhizomatous roots are the source of oil extraction
Historical Uses
In Vedic culture Turmeric played a culinary and religious role In Ayurveda Unani systems and ancient Sanskrit medical treatises it held medicinal significance It treated various health issues such as liver ailments throat infections indigestion common colds and was topically applied for skin sores and wound cleansing
Therapeutic Benefits
Turmeric Leaf Oil boasts therapeutic properties like astringent antiseptic analgesic antiinflammatory digestive antioxidant appetizer antiallergic antibacterial antitumor cardiovascular and stimulant
Blends Well With
Turmeric Oil harmonizes perfectly with Cardamom YlangYlang Ginger Cinnamon Blood Orange Grapefruit and Vanilla oils
General Precautionary Measures
Turmeric may slow down blood clotting increasing bleeding and bruising thus individuals with bleeding issues should avoid it
Those with bile duct obstruction or gallstones should refrain from using turmeric oil
Individuals with iron deficiency should use the oil cautiously as it may interfere with iron absorption
Botanical Name Curcuma Longa
CASÂ 8024371
Color amp Odor Pale yellow to reddishbrown oily liquid with a spicy fresh woods aroma
FEMA Â No
Methods of Extraction Steam Distillation
Constituents phellandrene
Solubility Soluble in alcohol insoluble in water
Specific Gravity 0916009366
Flash Point 60 C
Optical Rotation 24 27 20C
Major Constituents phellandrene
Volume
100 ml 250 ml 500 ml 1 Ltr 5 Ltr 10 Ltr 25 Ltr
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