Additional information
PACKSIZE | 60/1oz |
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Perfect on toast, over waffles, or by the spoonfuls straight from the jar, you’ll love their Cherry Preserves. With generous pieces of cooked cherries throughout, these Preserves are as good as it gets.
Cento Lupini Beans are ready to eat right out of the jar. Simply rinse and pinch off the skin and eat as a snack, drizzle with Cento Extra Virgin Olive Oil, salt and pepper, or add to your favorite dish for an extra intake of fiber and antioxidants.
Caper berries are the semi-green fruit of a Capparis Spinosa, the flowering bush that grows wild along the Mediterrnaean coastline, and are the prized, less intense version of the typical nonpareil caper. These juicy, pickled, grape-sized treats are wonderful with seafood and as a garnish for salads. Enjoy their delicate texture just like an olive or toss with pasta in a cream or butter sauce.
The same recipe as Divina dolmas, just in bite-sized pieces! Tender, early harvest grapevine leaves, filled with creamy textured rice, onions, dill and mint. Perfect for foodservice operations, especially caterers and multiunit chains.
Choice tender yet firm ceci are extremely versatile and extensively used in Mediterranean cooking. The chick peas contain unsaturated fatty acids, better known by the name of Omega 3, which, in addition to preventing states of depression have properties known to lower triglycerides and above all are bene cial to the heart rhythm.
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.