enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Breynia androgyna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breynia_androgyna

    Breynia androgyna, also known as katuk, star gooseberry, or sweet leaf, is a shrub grown in some tropical regions as a leaf vegetable. Its multiple upright stems can reach heights of 2.5 meters and bear dark green oval leaves of length 5–6 centimetres .

  3. List of syrups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_syrups

    Orgeat syrup – a sweet syrup made from almonds, sugar, and rose water or orange flower water; Oleo saccharum – A syrup made from the oil of citrus peels. Palm syrup – an edible sweet syrup produced from the sap of a number of palms, it is produced in the Canary Islands and coastal regions of South America.

  4. Pulasan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulasan

    Fruit A trio of pulasan fruits, one of which has been opened to reveal the sweet edible flesh. Pulasan tree with ripe fruits photographed in Kerala. Nephelium ramboutan-ake, the pulasan, [1] is a tropical fruit in the soapberry family Sapindaceae. [2] It is closely related to the rambutan and sometimes confused with it.

  5. List of unrefined sweeteners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unrefined_sweeteners

    Sugar beet syrup (Zuckerrübensirup in German) is made from the tuberous roots of the sugar beet (Beta vulgaris). [8] Sugar beet molasses, a by-product of the processing to make refined sugar, also exists but is mainly used for animal feed. [9] Yacón syrup is made from the tuberous roots of yacón (Smallanthus sonchifolius). [10] Sweet Cicely root

  6. Fructooligosaccharide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fructooligosaccharide

    Two different classes of fructooligosaccharide (FOS) mixtures are produced commercially, based on inulin degradation or transfructosylation processes.. FOS can be produced by degradation of inulin, or polyfructose, a polymer of D-fructose residues linked by β(2→1) bonds with a terminal α(1→2) linked D-glucose.

  7. Ribena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribena

    Ribena was originally manufactured in England by the Bristol-based food and drink company HW Carter as a blackcurrant squash. [4]: 132–133 Development research into pure fruit syrups for the manufacture of milkshakes had been done at the Long Ashton Agriculture and Horticulture Research Station in North Somerset using a pectinase enzyme process; Ribena was developed by biochemist Audrey ...

  8. Garcinia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garcinia

    The fruit is a berry with fleshy endocarp, [4] which in several species is delicious. Among neotropical Garcinia several species are dioecious ( G. leptophylla , G. macrophylla [ citation needed ] and G. magnifolia), although male and female trees have often been observed to have some degree of self-fertility.

  9. Longan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longan

    The fruit is sweet, juicy, and succulent in superior agricultural varieties. The seed and the peel are not consumed. Apart from being eaten raw like other fruits, longan fruit is also often used in Asian soups, snacks, desserts, and sweet-and-sour foods, either fresh or dried, and sometimes preserved and canned in syrup. The taste is different ...