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Popular choices for egg consumption are chicken, duck, quail, roe, and caviar, but the egg most often consumed by humans is the chicken egg, by a wide margin. List of egg dishes. List of egg topics. Fried eggs. A batch of tea eggs with shell still on soaking in a brew of spices and tea, an example of edible eggs.
Coleslaw – Salad consisting primarily of finely-shredded raw cabbage. Compote – Dessert of fruit cooked in syrup. Crushed red pepper – Condiment or spice made from red peppers. Dip – Type of sauce. List of common dips – Type of sauce. Disodium inosinate – umami paste. Fish paste – Paste made of fish meat.
This is a list of culinary herbs and spices. Specifically these are food or drink additives of mostly botanical origin used in nutritionally insignificant quantities for flavoring or coloring . This list does not contain fictional plants such as aglaophotis , or recreational drugs such as tobacco .
Calcium Lime Rust. Calcium Lime Rust, more commonly known as CLR, is a household cleaning product used for dissolving stains, such as calcium, lime, and iron oxide deposits.
Nutrition facts label. The nutrition facts label (also known as the nutrition information panel, and other slight variations) is a label required on most packaged food in many countries, showing what nutrients and other ingredients (to limit and get enough of) are in the food. Labels are usually based on official nutritional rating systems.
Cranberry seed oil, equally high in omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, primarily used in the cosmetic industry. Cubeb oil, used to flavor foods. Cumin seed oil /black seed oil, used as a flavor, particularly in meat products. Curry leaf oil, used to flavor food. Cypress oil, used in cosmetics.
This is a list of 599 additives that could be added to tobacco cigarettes. The ABC News program Day One first released the list to the public on March 7, 1994. [1] It was submitted to the United States Department of Health and Human Services in April 1994.
The International Nomenclature of Cosmetic Ingredients ( INCI) are the unique identifiers for cosmetic ingredients such as waxes, oils, pigments, and other chemicals that are assigned in accordance with rules established by the Personal Care Products Council (PCPC), previously the Cosmetic, Toiletry, and Fragrance Association (CTFA). [1]