January 21st, 2011

Dried Fruit Names

Dried Fruit Names

Send Dry Fruit Thali to India on Raksha Bandhan

Raksha Bandhan and Dry Fruits have one thing in common, they both possess a very significant value in their segment. Raksha Bandhan is one of the most significant among Indian festivals which is celebrated by Indians not only in India but all over the world. Likewise, dry fruits are the most tasteful, healthy and precious among edibles. In India, dry fruits improve the elegance of event and add a distinct flavor to the taste and interests of participants. If you are a sister preparing for Raksha Bandhan festival, you can consider preparing a Dry Fruit Thali to please each and everyone regardless of their age, this year.

If you are planning to buy a readymade Dry Fruit Thali for Rakhi, you will get many options available in the market such as Triple Maza (a mix of 3 main dry fruits Kaju, Badam and Pista), Masala Masti (special dry fruit and chocolate mix), Dry Delights (two of the most precious dry fruits), Special Kaju Thali, Dry Fruit in Silver Thali and what not, choices are unlimited and so are offerings this year. The market is full of special Rakhis, Rakhi Gifts and above all special Rakhi Thalis this year.

Today, many Indian sisters are living abroad. They are too away from their brothers to meet them personally in India. But this distance doesn't discourage their spirit of celebrating Raksha Bandhan. Sisters, wherever they may be, do send Rakhi to India, Rakhi Thalis and Rakhi Gifts for brothers to India on this occasion. Those who do so and want to add elegance to their Rakhi Thali to India this year, may decide to buy special Dry Fruit Thalis online. There are many websites offering beautiful Rakhis, Rakhi gifts and Dry Fruit Thalis to India.

Brothers, who are living abroad and want to send return Rakhi gifts to India for their sisters can also visit some good online Rakhi and Rakhi gifts stores which are full of Rakhi Return gifts to India. The collection is really unbeatable and unlimited. All you need is some clicks of your mouse on your PC and see the Rakhi gift delivered in India within 24 hours or so.

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FRUITFULNESS
FRUITFULNESS
List Price: $3.00
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Pacific Coast Deluxe Dried Fruit and Nut Crate Gift
Pacific Coast Deluxe Dried Fruit and Nut Crate Gift
Sale Price: $36.95
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Description

Nearly double the size of our Classic Sampler, this lovely, healthy crated assortment of nature's finest dried fruits and nuts is perfect for any occasion.

Features

  • Delicious nuts include Roasted Salted Almonds and Roasted Salted Pistachios in the Shell
  • With premium dried fruit including Dates, Prunes, Dried Apricots, Dried Pears, Dried Angelino Plums, Coconut Date Rolls with Almonds and Coconut
  • Presented in a charming wooden crate
Whole Dried Blueberry (resealable plastic bag)-20 oz
Whole Dried Blueberry (resealable plastic bag)-20 oz
Sale Price: $16.29
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Description

Whole berries rich in antioxidants. Ingredients: Blueberries, sugar, malic acid, natural flavor, citric acid, sunflower oil.

Features

  • rRch in Antioxidants.
The Beginner's Guide to Preserving Food at Home: Easy Techniques for the Freshest Flavors in Jams, Jellies, Pickles, Relishes, Salsas, Sauces, and Frozen and Dried Fruits and Vegetables
The Beginner's Guide to Preserving Food at Home: Easy Techniques for the Freshest Flavors in Jams, Jellies, Pickles, Relishes, Salsas, Sauces, and Frozen and Dried Fruits and Vegetables
List Price: $14.95
Sale Price: $9.46
You save: $5.49 (37%)
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Description

A wonderful thing is happening in home kitchens. People are rediscovering the joys of locally produced foods and reducing the amount of the grocery budget that's spent on packaged items, out-of-season produce, and heavily processed foods. But fresh, seasonal fruits and vegetables don't stay fresh and delicious forever - they must be eaten now . . . or preserved for later.For all the vegetable gardeners facing baskets overflowing with bright tomatoes, and for all the dedicated farmers' market fans and CSA members, The Beginner's Guide to Preserving Food at Home has the simple solutions that turn overwhelming bounty into neatly canned tomatoes, jars of jams and jellies, and crispy-tart relishes and pickles. Organized in a friendly, food-by-food format, readers will find freezing, drying, canning, and storing instructions for each vegetable, fruit, and herb. In many cases, several ways to freeze or can a food are described, and there are often other preserving suggestions as well, such as making juice or fruit leather. Everything is written with busy people in mind: these are the quickest, most efficient methods for preserving summer's bounty. Up-to-date information and clear, step-by-step instructions show even absolute beginners the way to a fully stocked pantry.

The Berry Bible: With 175 Recipes Using Cultivated and Wild, Fresh and Frozen Berries
The Berry Bible: With 175 Recipes Using Cultivated and Wild, Fresh and Frozen Berries
List Price: $29.95
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Description

Sweet, juicy, and delicious, berries -- everyone's favorite fruit -- can be found wild, grown in your own backyard, or purchased fresh or frozen year-round. But there's more to berries than glorious summer desserts. Packed with vitamins and antioxidants, berries are exceptionally good for you, too. In The Berry Bible, author Janie Hibler gets to the heart of these summer fruits, from their health benefits to their genus to how they are best put to use in the kitchen. An award-winning cookbook author and authority on the foods of the Pacific Northwest, Hibler offers 175 recipes, along with 68 full-color identification photographs and an A-to-Z encyclopedia that details well-known varieties such as blueberries and blackberries and lesser-known cultivars such as manzanitas and Juneberries. Hibler traveled the globe in her quest for berry lore, facts, and recipes, visiting the Canadian prairie to search out Saskatoon berries; Alaska, to pick wild blueberries with the Indians; and Europe, to peruse the markets for the best strawberries. Her delightful history of 41 berries, and personal annotations on how to use and store them, inspire you to try her Brioche French Toast with Sautéed Berries or tender Marionberry Biscuits, while cooling yourself on a hot summer day with her Strawberry Mojito and refreshing berry lemonades. Hibler offers everything berry, from first course to last. Start your meal with Chilled Blackberry—Lime Soup, move on to Sautéed Chicken Breast with Blueberry Port, and end on a lovely Boysenberry-Loganberry Cobbler or Peak-of-the-Season Blueberry Pie. In between, there's a chapter on how to wash berries, freeze them, measure them accurately, substitute them in recipes, and remove their stains, plus a primer on the magnificent creams -- whipped, crème fraîche, clotted, and Double Devon. There is also a chapter on berry preserves, jams, pickles, syrups, and toppings. The time is ripe to pick up The Berry Bible.

Book Description: Few foods capture the sweetness of nature like fresh berries, whether eaten straight off the bush or baked to perfection beneath a flaky crust. Now berry lovers can maximize their enjoyment with The Berry Bible, the new offering from James Beard Book Award-winning author Janie Hibler. Part encyclopedia, part cookbook, The Berry Bible begins with an explanation of the health benefits of nutrient-rich berries and goes on to profile dozens of important culinary berries and berrylike fruits in the vibrantly illustrated "A-to-Z Berry Encyclopedia." Tips on how to remove berry stains and freeze for the off-season pave the way for 175 delectable recipes that use cultivated, wild, fresh, and frozen berries. From Blackberry-Blueberry Cardamom Muffins, Mango-Raspberry Summer Soup, and Boysenberry Applesauce to Blackberry-Port Lamb Shanks, Almond-Gooseberry Cream Pie, and The Perfect Strawberry Shortcake, these succulent dishes are sure to garner The Berry Bible a permanent spot in any kitchen. Amazon Exclusive: Tom Douglas Reviews The Berry Bible Tom Douglas is an American chef, restaurateur, and writer. He is well known for helping to define Northwest cuisine and igniting the Seattle restaurant scene, winning the James Beard Award for Best Northwest Chef in 1994. Since 1989, Tom has opened five of Seattle's most popular restaurants: Dahlia Lounge, the Greek-inspired Lola, Serious Pie pizzeria, Palace Kitchen, and Pike Place Market's iconic seafood restaurant, Etta's. He also owns Dahlia Bakery, famous for its Triple Coconut Cream Pie. Tom is the author of Tom Douglas' Seattle Kitchen, named Best American Cookbook by the James Beard Foundation, Tom's Big Dinners, and I Love Crab Cakes! He bested Masaharu Morimoto in an episode of Iron Chef America and was named 2008 Bon Appetit Restaurateur of the Year. Read his exclusive guest review of Janie Hibler's The Berry Bible: Washington State is berry country. Every summer for a brief but glorious window of time, my Seattle restaurant kitchens overflow with berry abundance--first the sweet local strawberries, then blueberries, red and golden raspberries, boysenberries, blackberries, and finally, the wild huckleberries we buy from foragers, treasured in the restaurants for syrups, jams, and sauces. Berries are the sweet source of many purple-stained memories, like picking wild blackberries with my daughter, Loretta, when she was a kid, and slamming out hundreds of summer berry crisps after hours in the Palace Kitchen one year for the Bite of Seattle. That’s why I’m delighted by this AmazonEncore edition of Janie Hibler’s Northwest classic, The Berry Bible. A bible it is indeed--every berry under the sun is included here, from cloudberries and currants to cape gooseberries and salmonberries. Read up on the history, habitat, and health benefits of each berry before diving into the recipes where berries are used in every course, from soups and entrées to drinks and desserts... even barbecue sauce. Janie has studded the book with berry-relevant stories, anecdotes, and folklore. You can pick up some fabulous facts along the way. Did you know it takes 80 pounds of raspberries to make one 375 ml bottle of Framboise? My wife Jackie and I like to put up a batch or two of my Mom’s easy freezer strawberry jam (right on the back of the pectin box!), but I think Janie’s excellent chapter on berry jams, jellies, pickles, and preserves will extend our repertoire this summer. Now I’m going to head out to the deck with a Strawberry Mojito in one hand and my Berry Bible in the other to solve the big question--which dessert recipe to try first? I’m leaning towards Peak of the Season Blueberry Pie, but The Perfect Strawberry Shortcake sounds mighty fine. --Tom Douglas Recipe Excerpts from The Berry Bible Janie Hibler's recipes for Sangría Blanco and Grilled Paprika Chicken with Blackberry Sauce Delicious, good for us, but underrepresented on our tables, berries are one of nature's greatest gifts. Amending our lack of berry-smarts, Janie Hibler's The Berry Bible presents a definitive guide, with over 200 recipes using cultivated, wild, fresh, and frozen berries--from well-known types such as blueberries and raspberries (and their related varieties), to lesser known kinds, like the cloudberry and manzanita, and apple-like fruit enjoyed traditionally by Native Americans. The recipes cover a wide range of easily produced dishes, such as Morning Glory Muffins with Blackberries and Pork Tenderloin Salad with Warm Strawberry Dressing, and also include formulas for smoothies, cocktails, condiments like chutney, and homemade berry liqueurs such as Madame Rose Blan'’s Crème de Cassis. What makes the book a particularly valuable kitchen resource, however, is Hibler's A to Z berry encyclopedia, a section that, in addition to providing nomenclature, history, habitat, and classification information, also offers picking, buying, storing, and cooking advice. Accompanying the descriptions are pages of color photos that further aid in berry identification, a gift to those who like to gather their own. --Arthur Boehm (from the Hardcover edition)

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