#Nutmeg Exporters
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How Nutmeg Exporters Ensure Quality and Freshness
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#Aromatic Nutmeg Export#Aromatic Nutmeg#Nutmeg#Aromatic Nutmeg in India#Aromatic Nutmeg in Uttar Pradesh#Dried Nutmeg Supplier#Dried Nutmeg#Dried Nutmeg Export#Spices#Indian Masala#Exporter#Supplier#Uttar Pradesh#India
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WHY SPICES ARE CALLED THE BACKBONE OF CULINARY ARTS:- This commitment is grounded on the price and hard work we put on every product we deliver. SST Foodstuff Trading LLC handles only the loftiest quality products. With commitment and experience in the assistance, our charge is to give ultra-expensive healthy products like Sugar from Khaleej for our clients worldwide. For more info visit us: https://www.sst.ae/blog-why-spices-are-called-the-backbone-of-culinary-arts.html
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Kapadiya Expo Company is the one of the most rising Manufacturer, supplier and exporter of spices, herbal products, fresh fruits & vegetables, dehydrated fruits & vegetables, pluses & grains though the world. Contact us now for agro related products.
#spices manufacturer & exporter#spice exporter india#herbs manufacturer & exporter#Red Chili exporter from india#herbal products exporter from india#Turmeric exporter from india#Coriander Seed exporter from india#Cardamom exporter from india#Cinnamon exporter from india#Clove exporter from india#Fenugreek exporter from india#Star anise exporter from india#Black pepper exporter from india#White pepper exporter from india#Ginger exporter from india#Fennel seed exporter from india#Nutmeg exporter from india#Tamarind exporter from india#Celery seed exporter from india#Mustard seed exporter from india#Curry powder exporter from india#Asafoetida exporter from india#Saffron exporter from india#Bay leaves exporter from india#Mace exporter from india#Ajwain exporter from india#Dill Sheeds exporter from india#Rosemary exporter from india
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Want to Export Nutmeg?
Nutmeg is exported to over 90 countries. In 2020-2021 (Apr-Nov), India exported Nutmeg worth 6.14 USD million. The total volume of export in 2020-2021 (Apr-Nov) was around 981749.
Want to Export Nutmeg?
Come join us. . . Check out our website for more information: www.ximpex.in
We help you Export… Effortlessly!
#ximpex#export#growwithximpex#ximpexindia#internationaltrade#foreigntrade#globalization#globalbusiness#exportservice#business#exportfromindia#exportimport#exporteasy#exportgoods#exporter#exportnutmeg#nutmeg#logistic#logisticsmanagement#atmanirbhar#atmanirbharbharat#ministryofcommerce#exportbusiness#exportsurplus#exporting#exportshipment
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[ID: An extreme close-up of ground spices in various shades of brown and orange laid out in lines on a plate. End ID]
سبع بهارات فلسطينية / Seb'a baharat falastinia (Palestinian seven-spice)
Seb'a baharat is one of a few spice blends often referred to in English simply as “baharat” (the plural of Arabic بهار / bahar, “spice”). A warm, earthy blend, it is commonly used to season meat, fish, and poultry in the Levant, Eastern Arabia, and Egypt, where recipes differ from region to region and from person to person. Common ingredients include cumin, cardamom, black pepper, nutmeg, and cinnamon.
Palestinian versions of seb'a baharat are usually dominated by allspice, black pepper, and cinnamon, giving them a pungent and sweet head; nutmeg, cloves, and cardamom provide additional warmth, while cumin and coriander often round out the blend with earthiness and a hint of florality. Ginger is also an occasional inclusion.
By the early 2010s, decades of Israeli taxation on exports and imports of non-Israeli goods had eroded Palestinian economic and culinary self-determination; Israel had instituted further blockades of the Gaza border in 2007, leading to a sharp decline in exports. Several farmers in Gaza turned to growing spices and herbs, including cumin and ginger, on their farms with the intention of finding a profitable market for them in Europe. However, frequent border closings, punitive export taxes, and Israeli shooting at Palestinian farmers who were attempting to work their land, made the plan unviable.
More recently, Palestinians have continued to work to find new ways to produce food despite shrinking access to arable land and fresh water. Resisting Israeli targeting of Palestinian food self-sufficiency is a matter, not just of subsistence and economic power, but of identity and dignity.
Today, Israel's total siege of Gaza continues as civilians run out of food, water, power, and medical supplies. Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) has put out an urgent call for donations to provide medical supplies to hospitals when supply lines reopen. Also contact your representatives in the USA, UK, and Canada.
Ingredients:
1 Tbsp ground allspice (6.6g; 1 Tbsp + 1 tsp allspice berries)
1/2 Tbsp ground black pepper (6.2g; 1/2 Tbsp black peppercorns)
1/2 Tbsp ground cinnamon (5.3g; 1 large stick Chinese cassia)
1 1/4 tsp ground coriander (2g; 1 1/2 tsp coriander seeds)
1 tsp ground nutmeg (1.4g; 1/2 nutmeg)
1 tsp ground cloves (2g; 1 1/4 tsp whole cloves)
1 tsp ground cardamom (scant 1/2 Tbsp pods; 2.6g just seeds)
3/4 tsp ground cumin (2.1g; scant tsp cumin seeds)
Instructions:
1. In a mortar and pestle or using the flat of a knife, roughly crush nutmeg and cinnamon.
2. In a dry skillet over medium heat, toast whole spices one at a time until each is strongly fragrant. Remove from heat and allow to cool in a single layer on a large plate.
3. Grind all spices together in a mortar and pestle or a spice mill. Pass through a sieve to remove large pieces. Store in an airtight jar in a cool, dark place.
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Americans [...] would sip the rich cocoa as a hot drink. Cocoa made its way to North America on the same ships that transported rum and sugar from the Caribbean and South America [...] and was heavily reliant on the labor of enslaved Africans throughout the diaspora. [...] [B]y the early 1700s, Boston, Newport, New York and Philadelphia were processing cocoa into chocolate to export and to sell domestically. Chocolate was popular in the coffeehouse culture and was processed for sale and consumption by enslaved laborers in the North. Farther south, in Virginia, cocoa was becoming [...] so popular that it is estimated that approximately one-third of Virginia’s elite was consuming cocoa in some form or another. For the wealthy, this treat was sipped multiple times a week; for others it was out of reach. [...]
The art of chocolate-making – roasting beans, grinding pods onto a stone over a small flame – was a labor-intensive task. An enslaved cook would have had to roast the cocoa beans on the open hearth, shell them by hand, grind the nibs on a heated chocolate stone, and then scrape the raw cocoa, add milk or water, cinnamon, nutmeg or vanilla, and serve it piping hot.
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One of the first chocolatiers in the Colonies was an enslaved cook named Caesar.
Born in 1732, Caesar was the chef at Stratford Hall, the home of the Lees of Virginia, and in his kitchen sat one of only three chocolate stones in the Colony. The other two were located at the governor’s palace and at the Carter family estate, belonging to one of the wealthiest families in Virginia. Caesar was responsible for cooking multiple meals a day for the Lees and any free person who came to visit. [...]
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The work was oppressive in the plantation kitchens at Christmas time. [...]
[T]hose working in the big house kitchen and as domestic laborers were expected to work around the clock to ensure a perfect holiday for the white family. The biggest task at hand was to cook and serve Christmas dinner, and chocolate was a favorite addition to the three-course formal dinner. [...] Oyster stew, meat pies, roasted pheasant, puddings, roasted suckling pig and Virginia ham are some of the many dishes that would be served in just one course. The night would finish with the sipping of chocolate: toasted, ground and spiced [...] and served in sipping-cups made specifically for drinking chocolate. [...]
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Decades before the two well-known enslaved chefs, Monticello’s James Hemings and George Washington’s Chef Hercules, [...] Caesar was running one of the Colonies’ most prestigious kitchens inside of Stratford Hall, and making chocolate for the Lees and their guests. [...] [H]is son, Caesar Jr., lived nearby and was the postillion [...].
The stress of cooking the most important dinner of the year was combined with the fear of what was to come on Jan. 1. New Year’s Day was commonly known as heartbreak day, when enslaved folks would be sold to pay off debts or rented out to a different plantation. Jan. 1 represented an impending doom, and the separation of families and loved ones. [...] Caesar disappeared from the records by the end of the 18th century. By 1800, his son Caesar Jr. was still owned by the Lees, but as that year ended, Christmas came and went, and Caesar Jr. was put up for collateral by Henry Lee for payment of his debts.
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The world Caesar lived in was one fueled by the Columbian Exchange, which was built from enslaved labor [...]: pineapples, Madeira wine, port, champagne, coffee, sugar and cocoa beans. These items traveled from plantation to dining room via the Atlantic trade, and were central to securing the reputation of Virginia’s plantation elite. The more exotic and delicious the food, the more domestic fame one would reap. Having cocoa delivered directly to your home, and having a chocolatier in the kitchen, were exceptional. It was through Caesar’s culinary arts that Stratford Hall became well-known throughout Colonial Virginia as a culinary destination.
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All text above by: Kelley Fanto Deetz. “Oppression in the kitchen, delight in the dining room: The story of Caesar, an enslaved chef and chocolatier in Colonial Virginia.” The Conversation. 21 December 2020. [Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks/contractions added by me.]
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GREENHEARSTIAN CUISINE
(This time we are learning about the traditional cuisine of Greenhearst, hometown of Evan Atlas!)
OVERVIEW
Greenhearst is often called “Evangeline’s breadbasket” because most of the kingdom’s grains are grown here. But Greenhearstians farm a wide variety of other crops too, most notably apples, potatoes, and squashes. This territory exports a lot of locally-made beers and ciders all over the world, so peoples far and wide can get a taste of Greenhearst. Many of Evangeline Kingdom’s favorite recipes originate from here, and they are…
BAKED APPLE
The baked apple is a versatile food that can be eaten any time, depending on the ingredients used. It is simply an apple that has been cored and baked until soft. If eaten for breakfast, lunch, or dinner, it is stuffed with brown sugar and minced beef or squash. If eaten for dessert, it is instead stuffed with cream cheese or pudding. It is often flavored with cinnamon.
PUMPKIN PORRIDGE
Pumpkin season is an exciting time for Greenhearstians, as they love to eat pumpkin porridge for breakfast. It is made by mixing cornmeal with pureed pumpkins and tomatoes, then it is usually flavored further with cinnamon and nutmeg. It is full of fiber and vitamins, making it popular with elderly people in particular. Children and the sickly also benefit from eating this food. Greenhearstians even feed pumpkin porridge to their sick livestock to perk them up, and they swear by its miraculous results.
BEEF LOAF
This is a typical lunch or dinner item in Greenhearst, traditionally served alongside mashed potatoes. It is made by mixing ground beef with crumbled bread, eggs, tomato paste, diced onions, and spices. These ingredients are baked into a hearty, delicious loaf that is crispy on the outside and soft on the inside.
FRYING CHEESE
Though Greenhearst isn’t known for its ranching industry, many of its residents do own their own milk-producing livestock. Locals like to turn this milk into hard cheeses and then fry them on the grill like meat. What makes this dish popular is its versatility and portability. It can be wrapped up and carried around all day, which is ideal for those who work outside. It is often eaten plain, but may also be flavored or paired in countless ways. Tomatoes, mushrooms, peppers, and apples are some of the more common pairings.
APPLE CIDER
Greenhearst is home to vast apple orchards, and it seems there is nothing the locals can’t do with this fruit. Apple cider is such a hot item here that there are entire shops dedicated to it. Keeping the shelves stocked is easy with so many different types and flavors available. Greenhearst produces enough cider to export it to other regions as well, including overseas. This drink, along with beer, support a large chunk of the territory’s economy. Cider comes in alcoholic and non-alcoholic varieties, so it can be enjoyed by people of all ages. It can also be served cold or warm.
POTAPLO CASSEROLE
Thinly-sliced potatoes and apples are arranged in layers and baked in a dish with onions, rosemary, nutmeg, and topped with melted cheese. This dish is so filling, flavorful, and simple to prepare that it has become the most popular dinnertime meal in Greenhearst.
CARAMEL BUTTER BAR
These chewy bars are a common dessert food in the region. A layer of melted caramel is poured onto buttery dough forms, then the bars are topped with crushed hazelnuts and salt. Once they cool, they are solidified and ready to eat. These bars are high in fat and sugar, but locals find it hard to eat them in moderation.
CHICKEN CHILI
A flavorful chili containing chicken, red beans, green beans, carrots, tomatoes, onions, and peppers. It is hard to grow spicy peppers in Greenhearst’s cool-temperate climate, so this chili is quite mild when prepared the traditional way. Regardless, it is hearty and healthy with its plethora of nutritious ingredients.
OTHER
Beer and appelchek are also staples of traditional Greenhearstian cuisine. You can read more about them on the main Evangelite Cuisine article.
SEE ALSO
Cuisine Masterpost
Greenhearst
Queen Indiga Evangeline
Evangelite Fashions
Evangelite Territories
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Questions/Comments?
Lore Masterpost
Read the Series
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Grenada, Eastern Caribbean, is the world's second largest exporter of nutmeg.
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The divine blend of spices needed to make curry first reached Southeast Asia about 2,000 years ago, when the region began trading with the Indian subcontinent, according to an analysis of ancient spice residue.
The new project analyzed 12 different spice grinding tools unearthed at the ancient trading port of Oc Eo, in modern-day Vietnam, by washing them with water and chemicals. This produced hundreds of tiny fragments that the researchers painstakingly identified (to a reasonable degree of certitude) under a microscope. The results sounded like a shopping list for making curry: turmeric, ginger, fingerroot, sand ginger, galangal, clove, nutmeg and cinnamon.
“These spices are indispensable ingredients used in the making of curry in South Asia today,” the paper says.
Ancient Trading Spices
Where did all these spices comes from?
They could have come from the surrounding countryside. Farmers in Southeast Asia made many of these crops themselves, and if not, they could have imported the seeds and gotten started.
On the other hand, the turmeric could have easily come from India, where use of the spice dates back thousands of years. And the ginger and cloves may have come from India as well, or maybe China.
Cinnamon was widely traded at the time and may have come all the way from Israel.
The galangal, fingerroot and sand ginger are native to Southeast Asia and could easily have come from nearby soils. These more specialized spices are still used in the region’s curry paste.
Footed Grinding Slabs
As a testament to the spice trade’s popularity, the spice grinders made up the majority of the stone tools recovered from Oc Eo and another, nearby city called Angkor Borei. The original archaeological dig at Oc Eo found numerous footed grinding slabs, which look like little stone workbenches for grinding spices – which is what they likely were. Versions of these slabs are still sometimes used in the traditional preparation of curry.
The largest slab recovered measured 2.5 feet by 1 foot. Researchers found it buried not far from a piece of charcoal that dated to about A.D. 250, which hinted at when curry first made its way to the area.
Oc Eo
At that time, the city would have been not just importing and exporting goods but making them as well, according to the paper. Residents raised religious monuments and shaped metal tools, glass jewelry and pottery.
All the while, they would have worked to trade and process many different spices. Archaeologists working there even found an intact nut that dated to about A.D. 200, and it still “yielded a nutmeg aroma,” the paper says.
Now part of Vietnam, Oc Eo once belonged to the ancient kingdom of Funan, which maintained a base of power further up the Mekong River.
In Oc Eo, culture prospered between the first and eighth centuries, during the latter years of the Iron Age. As the site’s ancient canals filled with ships, Buddhism and Hinduism left their own marks on the sprawling complex, including a possible contribution to curry cooking. The need to dye the Buddhist monks’ robes yellow may have first prompted Oc Eo to import turmeric, the paper says.
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Scent of Success: How Indian Nutmeg Exporters are Perfuming the World Economy
Introduction
Standing out as a familiar spice, nutmeg earns its place as an aromatic highlight in the world of spices. India's role as a major exporter of a range of flavors including Turmeric, Chilli, Clove, Cardamom, Black Pepper, and Nutmeg is a testament to its flavorful impact. Amongst all spices in recent times nutmeg exporters in India are making new benchmarks in world spices market.
Nutmeg offers various health benefits apart from flavour and aroma in the food. Good sleep, increased focus and concentration, good memory, reducing inflammation, curbing bacterial infections and de-stressing human body are important benefits of Nutmeg. Because of this benefits India exporters are marketing Nutmeg not only as spice but as a health enhancing plant product.
Now let us see various reasons for Indian exporters to gain more attention worldwide:
Rich In Quality:
For any product to be popular amongst other countries quality of product is an inevitable aspect. Similarly, Indian nutmeg exporters are high on demand and gaining international market attention because of the high quality provided by them. India produces one of the finest quality of nutmegs as it has most favourable climate for nutmeg cultivation. The nutmeg exporters in India make sure that the nutmeg is harvested at the right time and the harvested crop undergoes stringent quality checks. This ensure that nutmeg exporters from India supply best quality to the international market.
Affordable Pricing
Another aspect that makes Indian nutmeg exporters stand apart is their competitive pricing. When compared to other nutmeg-producing countries, Indian exporters offer their products at relatively lower prices without compromising on quality. This is the reason why Indian Nutmeg Exporters are gaining International Attention when price is always a greater concern.
Sustainable Cultivation Practices
Indian nutmeg exporters have been at the prime façade of sustainable cultivation practices as they know that sustainability is an inevitable concern in the global agricultural industry. They incorporate eco-friendly farming techniques and ensure fair trade practices. Such sustainable practices not only attract environmentally conscious buyers but also contribute to India’s reputation as a responsible nutmeg exporter.
Wide Range of Products
Indian nutmeg exporters offer a wide range of products which are helpful for different consumer needs. Apart from Nutmeg supply as a whole spice, Indian exporters also supply ground nutmeg, nutmeg oil, and other value-added nutmeg products. This diversification of products allows international buyers to choose the product as per their requirements, further adding to the popularity of Indian nutmeg exporters.
Export Infrastructure
India is one such country that has invested significantly for its robust and complex export infrastructure. This has helped easy transportation of nutmeg from farms to ports without hampering the freshness and quality. The logistical network along with efficient customs procedures, has strengthened India’s position as a reliable and efficient nutmeg exporter.
Conclusion
With all the reasons cited above, we can very well proudly say that Indian nutmeg exporters are gaining international attention. With this we can conclude that India has become a go-to destination for international buyers for nutmeg. One such Indian Nutmeg exporter is Kisan Agro from India. With more than 20 years of experience in exporting spices to world market, it is well known for the quality supply at affordable prices. Please let us know if you need any spices at [email protected] and you can visit us at www.viralspices.com.
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#Aromatic Mace#Aromatic Mace spice#Aromatic Mace Exporter#Mace spice Supplier#Mace spice#Nutmeg#Aromatic Spice#Javitri#Javitri Exporter#Mace in India#Indian Mace Spices#Spices#Indian Masala#Exporter#Supplier#Uttar Pradesh#India
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National Rice Pudding Day
All we can think of is a bowl of some good old rice pudding this National Rice Pudding Day taking place on August 9. For many of us, starting from our childhood to our adulthood, rice pudding has been a staple in our diets. Made with a base of rice cooked in milk and sweetened with sugar, syrup, or honey, rice pudding can be found in many cultures and cuisines all over the world. Of course, each region has its own unique take on the dish. Some add nuts and spices like nutmeg, cinnamon, or cardamom to it, while others throw in a dash of wine to give it that wow factor. For a more fragrant look and feel, many people in the Middle East also add pistachio slivers and rose petals before serving it. You can have it hot or cold, and as a breakfast dish or a dessert after dinner. So, how are you having your rice pudding on August 9?
History of National Rice Pudding Day
National Rice Pudding Day celebrates the ancient rice pudding dish in all its glory and greatness. While we may know the sweet version of the dish today, did you know that it actually started out as a savory treat? It is difficult to pinpoint the exact location and time of the creation of rice pudding, but many scholars believe it may have originated in either ancient China or in ancient India. Both these countries have a long history of including rice as well as sugar in their religious and cultural activities, so it only makes sense that the combination of the two may have been included in their cuisines as well. ‘Kheer,’ which is Hindi for rice pudding, was first recorded in ancient India in 6000 B.C., and it was included as a staple in a prescribed Ayurvedic diet regime. It is also interesting to note that the early versions of the Indian rice pudding did not actually include rice or sugar. In place of rice, Indians made use of the cereal grain known as sorghum.
Elsewhere in the world, rice pudding was being made with rice. The grain had reached Europe through exports delivered by water or the Silk Road in the 1300s. Because it was being exported from Asia and was not being grown in Europe, rice automatically became extremely expensive. Thus, rice pudding could only be enjoyed by the elite and royalty of European countries. Before the 1500s, rice pudding was savory in nature. It was made with rice being boiled in a broth with saffron and almond milk. Chefs started including sugar into the dish to make it sweet, and soon a sweetened rice pudding started gaining popularity. It was in the eighteenth century that rice pudding became more commonplace and less expensive, all thanks to globalization. The lowered rice prices meant the grain was in easier reach of the masses, and in today’s world, it is considered to be a cheap, but filling meal.
National Rice Pudding Day timeline
6000 B.C. Indian Rice Pudding for Healthy Living
Ancient India includes rice pudding in the Ayurvedic diet in order to ensure healthy living.
14th Century Forme of Cury in England
Rice pudding, known as Forme of Cury or rice pottage, is made with rice, almond milk, and saffron in English Royal kitchens.
17th Century Sweetened Rice Pudding Recipes
Some of the modern-age rice pudding recipes come from the Tudor time period, and are called ‘whitepot.’
18th – 19th Century Rice Becomes Cheaper
Rice grains become cheaper, allowing access to the public who can now enjoy rice pudding treats, unlike their predecessors.
How To Celebrate National Rice Pudding Day
Make rice pudding
Have a rice pudding contest
Try a new rice pudding recipe
Take a trip down memory lane and make your favorite rice pudding recipe. Because of its versatility, you can choose to have it hot or cold, and for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Rice pudding is one of the highest-rated comfort foods out there because of its gooey, yet grainy texture that leaves one filled with love and warmth.
Participating in a rice pudding competition is one of the best ways to celebrate the day. There are two ways you can go about doing this. You can either hold a rice pudding cooking competition or you can have an eating competition. Whether you choose one, two, or have both, it’s going to be a fun-filled day.
Going back to what is tried and tested can be comforting, but seeking out the new can reward you with invaluable experiences. Give new rice pudding recipes a try. It could be a sweet or a savory recipe, the choice is yours.
5 Facts About Rice That Will Blow Your Mind
Sticky rice for strong cement
White rice is brown rice
Rice is grown everywhere but Antarctica
The shelf-life is decades long
Good for health
The Great Wall of China is held together with sticky rice that has been mixed with calcium carbonate.
All white rice comes from brown rice, and this is because the white rice has the brown coating of bran removed.
Rice is grown everywhere except Antarctica because of the continent’s extremely cold temperatures.
Rice, when stored in a cool and dry environment, will be good to consume for the next 10 to 30 years.
Because rice contains several minerals and antioxidants, it is great for your health, particularly for your skin.
Why We Love National Rice Pudding Day
It’s a celebration of rice pudding
It’s a celebration of ancient times
It’s a celebration of a staple food item
Rice pudding has come a long way in terms of development. It has been enjoyed by millions for centuries. With easy-to-make recipes and simple yet enjoyable taste, rice pudding is loved by many all over the globe.
A look into ancient history will reveal a lot of information on how people led their lives in order to ensure healthy and peaceful living. One historical overview of rice pudding allows us just that benefit of looking into how human civilizations utilized a single rice pudding dish in their daily lives.
Rice is a staple food item for many countries in the world. In fact, 50% of the world’s population consumes rice on a daily basis. Apart from helping our skin stay smooth and supple, rice also aids in healthy hair, is good for our overall health, and keeps our tummies filled and happy.
Source
#National Rice Pudding Day#NationalRicePuddingDay#9 August#food#dessert#Spain#España#Rice pudding with cinnamon#vacation#travel#original photography#tourism#summer 2021#national food#spoon#plate#glass bowl#Southern Europe#Milchreis#Arroz con leche#restaurant
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Kapadiya Expo Company is the one of the most rising Manufacturer, supplier and exporter of spices, herbal products, fresh fruits & vegetables, dehydrated fruits & vegetables, pluses & grains though the world. Contact us now for agro related products.
#spices manufacturer & exporter#spice exporter india#herbs manufacturer & exporter#Red Chili exporter from india#herbal products exporter from india#Turmeric exporter from india#Coriander Seed exporter from india#Cardamom exporter from india#Cinnamon exporter from india#Clove exporter from india#Fenugreek exporter from india#Star anise exporter from india#Black pepper exporter from india#White pepper exporter from india#Ginger exporter from india#Fennel seed exporter from india#Nutmeg exporter from india#Tamarind exporter from india#Celery seed exporter from india#Mustard seed exporter from india#Curry powder exporter from india#Asafoetida exporter from india#Saffron exporter from india#Bay leaves exporter from india#Mace exporter from india#Ajwain exporter from india#Dill Sheeds exporter from india#Rosemary exporter from india
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long resisted the concept of a two-state solution, but rarely so explicitly as in the months since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas and the subsequent war in Gaza. U.S. President Joe Biden insists, however, that there’s a path forward for an independent Palestine in cooperation with Netanyahu’s government.
“I think we’ll be able to work something out … I think there’s ways in which this could work,” Biden recently told reporters, referring to a potential postwar deal that could establish a Palestinian state while also overcoming his Israeli counterpart’s objections.
What Biden seemed to have in mind was a Palestinian state that would be both independent and demilitarized. Axios has reported that State Department officials have already been tasked with looking into what a demilitarized Palestine would look like “based on other models from around the world.”
There is growing acceptance of the idea in the international community as a possible way out of the current conundrum—namely, by assuaging Israeli security concerns and handing Palestinians a state of their own to end the cycle of violence. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has said that Australia may recognize a Palestinian state if it was “demilitarized.” There even appears to be backing from some significant players in the Arab world. “We are ready for this state to be demilitarized,” said Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi during a November 2023 news conference in the presence of the Spanish and Belgian prime ministers. Sisi is a close ally of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, which presumably would have been consulted by Cairo.
But a minefield of diplomatic challenges needs to be navigated to make this idea a success. None of the existing states and territories without armed forces compare the uniquely difficult circumstances faced by Israelis and Palestinians, and none offers a model that can simply be adopted to resolve one of the most intractable conflicts in one of the world’s most restive regions.
Nearly 40 countries and territories do not have a standing army, and nearly all are relatively small in size and population. Many are island states, such as Grenada, famous for its nutmeg exports, or Dominica, known for its natural hot springs and tropical rainforests. Many have protection from bigger, well-armed states such as the United States, or from NATO for some of those that lie in Europe.
Liechtenstein, however, has neither a military nor NATO membership, and yet it indirectly benefits from NATO’s protective umbrella.
“If there’s a war, there will be many other countries that will be crossed first,” Liechtenstein’s ambassador to the European Union, Pascal Schafhauser, told Foreign Policy in his office in Brussels. Tucked between Austria and Switzerland, the landlocked nation coordinates policing efforts with its immediate neighbors and is, by default, protected by militarily stronger neighbors such as Germany and France in the extended region. The roughly 40,000 inhabitants of Liechtenstein reside in a peaceful and prosperous region, and they have not yet found a compelling reason to reverse the decision that led to demilitarization of the country in 1868.
Liechtenstein and Palestine, however, could not be any more different. While Liechtenstein’s geography and equally prosperous neighbors guard it from external threats, the Palestinian territories are cheek-to-jowl with Israel—their arch foe. Furthermore, an independent Palestine would still have to reckon with a meddlesome Iran, which is likely to keep aiding nonstate armed groups—such as Hezbollah and the Houthis—in firing rockets at Israel and challenging the stability of any arrangement.
Costa Rica is often hailed as a paragon of development in the Latin American region. While there are many factors behind its success, at least one of them is widely considered to be demilitarization. Back in 1948, Costa Rica abolished the military, and unlike some of its neighbors, it hasn’t been embroiled in coups and military takeovers since. Instead, it has spent the money that would go toward a defense budget on human development. Unlike Palestine, however, none of its neighbors are trying to invade its territory or instigate an armed uprising.
The changing internal security dynamics in Costa Rica nonetheless offer a lesson. In a recent paper titled “The Myth of Demilitarization in Costa Rica,” Markus Hochmüller and Markus-Michael Müller highlight the fact that crime is on the rise there, and that there are calls to hand increased powers to heavily armed special policing units such as the Fuerza Especial Operativa. This illustrates the danger that even a basic policing structure could be militarized at a later stage.
Haiti, on the other hand, is a classic example of how a demilitarized state can be crippled internally by local armed gangs. The United Nations Security Council has once again agreed to send foreign troops to help the government reclaim the neighborhoods and essential infrastructure that have been seized by criminal gangs.
If Hamas doesn’t agree to disarm, and other armed groups in Gaza are not on board with the final settlement, there are similar worries of continued unrest, not just between these groups and Israel, but also between them and the authorities of an independent Palestinian state.
The case of the Solomon Islands’ embrace of Beijing shows that even if demilitarized a state can choose belligerent military allies that can reshape broader security dynamics in a region. For a long time, the Pacific nation had been under Australia’s security influence, but midway through 2023, Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare met with his Chinese counterpart and signed an agreement to boost policing cooperation that would allow Beijing to train its police officers.
The Palestinian territories are vastly different from any of these countries, as it fears an imminent threat from its own neighbor, faces disunity over what qualifies as a settlement within its own population, and is the victim of an Iranian agenda to expand its regional influence.
From the Israeli perspective, being absent on the ground in Gaza could result in another Oct. -like attack by insurgents who don’t recognize Israel’s right to exist.
Eran Lerman, a former deputy national security advisor of Israel, told Foreign Policy that at best, Israel would accept a “1.8-state solution” with serious restrictions that would keep Palestinians from pursuing their own independent policies in matters of defense.
“First, we need to retain some sort of control of borders so we can see what’s coming in,” Lerman said. “Secondly, we need to have a say on how many and what kind of arms Palestine can keep and on the size of the police and security forces it can have to ensure it doesn’t turn into a military in the future.”
Netanyahu has instread proposed a “state minus,” which would include limitations on sovereignty and guarantees to Israel beyond demilitarization, which observers say is more in sync with the public mood among Israelis.
“Would a Palestinian state be allowed to enter into a military agreement with Iran? Or to conduct military exercises with Hezbollah?” said Daniel Schwammenthal, the director of the American Jewish Committee’s Transatlantic Institute in Brussels. He argued that “Palestine must agree to not enter into defense agreements with enemy states of Israel,” for instance.
Nour Odeh, a Palestinian political analyst, said the key question from Palestinians’ point of view was not whether a prospective state has a military, but rather the final border settlement.
“Is it going to be Bantustan or on the ’67 borders? That’s more important,” she told Foreign Policy over the phone from Ramallah, referencing Palestinian fears that Israel intends to keep control of large chunks of the West Bank in a way that keeps Palestinian lands disjointed. “If Israel would not attack, would not invade, if there are international guarantees to that effect, then having a military is not exactly a Palestinian priority, in my opinion,” she added.
But not every Palestinian may feel the same way. Schwammenthal pointed out that according to a recent poll conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, 72 percent of Palestinians backed Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack. He said that proved that support for an armed movement Palestinians was high.
Sisi, the Egyptian president, has proposed that the security concerns of both Israelis and Palestinians could be answered if a multinational security force was deployed to facilitate the transition. “There can also be guarantees of forces, whether NATO forces, United Nations forces, or Arab or American forces, until we achieve security for both states, the nascent Palestinian state and the Israeli state,” he said back in November. Some Israeli intellectuals backed the idea of a multinational and committed force, but they want to try that out in Gaza first to see if it works.
And all this presupposes that Netanyahu, or any conceivable successor, would earnestly consider consenting to the creation of any independent Palestinian state at all.
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