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N-free extracts are present up to 21%. Seeds form only 0.5% of tomato. Seeds are waste products in food industries manufacturing tomato juice, sauce, ketchup and food colours such as lycopene and beta carotene. Seeds are recovered from discarded waste product by flotation. In India the potential availability of seeds will be 7500 tonnes per annum.
Fresh moyeam leaves Fresh moyeam flower Processed moyeam Moyeam tea. Nekemias grossedentata, [1] known as moyeam, [2] is a species of plant in the family Vitaceae. It is mainly distributed in central and southern China and Indochina. [3] The leaves and stems are used to make a herbal tea called "moyeam".
The oil is known as 'camellia oil', 'tea seed oil', or 'camellia seed oil'. [2] As of 2016 4,000,000 hectares (9,900,000 acres) of oleifera forest centered on the Yangtze river basin in Hunan , Jiangxi , and Guangxi produces 0.26 million tons of oil.
Camellia oleifera, which originated in China, is notable as an important source of edible oil (known as tea oil or camellia oil) obtained from its seeds. [2] It is commonly known as the oil-seed camellia or tea oil camellia, though to a lesser extent other species of camellia are used in oil production too.
Green tea is a type of tea made from the leaves and buds of the Camellia sinensis that have not undergone the withering and oxidation process that creates oolong teas and black teas. [1] Green tea originated in China in the late 1st millennium BC, and since then its production and manufacture has spread to other countries in East Asia.
It is found in high content in the dried leaves of green tea (7380 mg per 100 g), white tea (4245 mg per 100 g), and in smaller quantities, black tea (936 mg per 100 g). [2] During black tea production, the catechins are mostly converted to theaflavins and thearubigins via polyphenol oxidases .
Stevia rebaudiana is a plant species in the genus Stevia of the family Asteraceae. It is commonly known as candyleaf, sweetleaf or sugarleaf. [1] [2] It is a small seasonal plant which grows to a height of 30–60 centimetres (1–2 feet). [2] It has elongated leaves that grow along the stems and are lined up against each other.
Tomberry is a trademarked name for an unusually small cultivar of tomatoes developed by the Dutch company Eminent Seeds [1] and produced by the Netherlands company Littletom BV and distributed in the United Kingdom and continental Europe.