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Landang is a processed starch product extracted from the inner trunk of the buli or buri tree [1] (), a type of palm native to the Philippines and other tropical countries. This tree only flowers once in its life and then dies.
The Bambara groundnut is very drought-resistant. [21] The minimal annual rainfall requirement is about 300 mm [11] and optimal annual rainfall is between 750 mm [11] and 1400 mm [11] and should not exceed 3000 mm. [11] Bambara groundnut can tolerate heavy rainfall, but it will result in yield losses if they happen at harvest. [19]
RFM Corporation (PSE: RFM) is a publicly listed food and beverage company in the Philippines. RFM is a manufacturer of flour and flour-based products, milk, juice drinks, and ice cream. As of June 2013, RFM had an asset base of P12 billion and a total market capitalization of P17.1 billion. [1]
The National Food Authority was created by President Ferdinand Marcos through Presidential Decree No. 4 dated September 26, 1972, under the name National Grains Authority (NGA) with the mission of promoting the integrated growth and development of the grains industry covering rice, corn, feed grains and other grains like sorghum, mung beans, and peanuts. [1]
Peanut butter cookie – peanut butter is a principal ingredient in this cookie; Peanut chutney – a mildly spicy chutney side dish that can be used with several snack foods and breakfast foods; Peanut flour – made from crushed, fully or partly defatted peanuts; Peanut oil – a mild-tasting vegetable oil derived from peanuts
Franklin Baker (1846–1923) [2] was a flour miller in Philadelphia and started the business's desiccated coconut business in 1894 after he received a cargo of fresh coconuts from Cuba in payment for a consignment of flour he exported. Baker searched for a buyer for the coconuts, and became convinced there was an untapped market for coconut.
Binignit is a Visayan dessert soup from the central Philippines. The dish is traditionally made with glutinous rice cooked in coconut milk with various slices of sabá bananas, taro, ube, and sweet potato, among other ingredients. [1] [2] [3] It is comparable to various dessert guinataán (coconut milk-based) dishes found in other regions such ...
A mixture of milk and water and another of flour are alternately mixed into the yolks, then egg whites are beaten and folded in before the dough is poured into muffin cups and steamed for 15 to 20 minutes. [23] [24] It is a steamed variant of mamón, a traditional Filipino chiffon cake.