- AALST
- Aluminium
- Antipasto
- Baking Paper
- Beverage
- Biscuits
- Boiron
- Butter
- Canned Vegetables/Vegetables
- Cemoi
- Cereal
- Cheese
- Chef Rubber
- Chefmaster
- Chocolate
- Chocolate Transfer Sheets
- Colour
- CONTINENTAL PATISSERIE
- Cream
- Dawn
- Decoration
- Dessert
- Dobla
- Dreidoppel
- Emulsifier
- Eurovanille
- Fat
- Felchlin
- Filling
- Flavour
- Flour
- Fries
- Fruit
- Ingredient
- Ireks
- Jam
- Kondima
- La Rose Noire
- Martellato
- Meat
- Nut
- Oil & Vinegar
- Pasta
- Paste
- PME
- Pregel
- Premix
- PVC Food Wrap Film
- Rice and Riscotto
- Salt
- Sauce
- Seafoods
- Seed
- Sosa
- Spices and Herbs
- Sugar
- Truffle
- Valrhona
- Vegan
- Others
Hong Yap Trading Company
56B, Jalan Siam, 10400 George Town, Penang, Malaysia.
+604-229 3579
BEAUFOR GHERKIN IN VINEGAR 350GM
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Country of Origin FRANCE
Crisp, tart pickles made from tiny gherkin cucumbers. The gherkin is a fruit similar in form and nutritional value to a cucumber. Gherkins and cucumbers belong to the same species but are different cultivar groups. They are usually picked when 4 to 8 cm in length and pickled in jars or cans with vinegar (often flavored with herbs, particularly dill; hence, dill pickle) or brine to resemble a pickled cucumber. The term can also be used to refer to the West Indian Burr Gherkin (Cucumis anguria), a related species, originally from West Africa and introduced to the West Indies, probably by the Portuguese. It is edible and may be pickled, but must be picked when no longer than 4 cm long, since it becomes bitter and spiny if allowed to grow larger.
Crisp, tart pickles made from tiny gherkin cucumbers. The gherkin is a fruit similar in form and nutritional value to a cucumber. Gherkins and cucumbers belong to the same species but are different cultivar groups. They are usually picked when 4 to 8 cm in length and pickled in jars or cans with vinegar (often flavored with herbs, particularly dill; hence, dill pickle) or brine to resemble a pickled cucumber. The term can also be used to refer to the West Indian Burr Gherkin (Cucumis anguria), a related species, originally from West Africa and introduced to the West Indies, probably by the Portuguese. It is edible and may be pickled, but must be picked when no longer than 4 cm long, since it becomes bitter and spiny if allowed to grow larger.