Friday 7 November 2014

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes ,Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

source:- Google.com.pk

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Biography

Stir frying (Chinese: 炒; pinyin: chǎo) is a Chinese cooking technique in which ingredients are fried in a small amount of very hot oil while being stirred in a wok. The technique originated in China and in recent centuries has spread into other parts of Asia and the West. Many claim that this quick, hot cooking seals in the flavors of the foods, as well as preserving their color and texture.[1]

Scholars think that wok (or pan) frying may have been used as early as the Han dynasty (206 B.C.E. – 220 C.E.) for drying grain, not meats and vegetables, but it was not until the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) that the wok reached its modern shape and allowed quick cooking in hot oil. [2] Well into the 20th century, while restaurants and affluent families could afford the oil and fuel needed for stir fry, the most widely used cooking techniques remained boiling and steaming. Stir fry cooking came to predominate over the course of the century as more people could afford oil and fuel, and in the West spread beyond Chinese communities. [3]

Stir frying and Chinese food have been recommended as both healthy and appealing for their skillful use of vegetables, meats, and fish which are moderate in their fat content and sauces which are not over rich, provided calories are kept at a reasonable level.[4]
The term "stir-fry" was introduced into the English language in Buwei Yang Chao's book How to Cook and Eat in Chinese (1945), to describe the chǎo technique.[5]

During the Tang dynasty (618–907) chao referred to roasting tea leaves. Stir frying became a popular method for cooking food only later, during the Ming dynasty (1368–1644).
The Chinese character "chao" (炒) is attested in inscriptions on bronze vessels from the Eastern Zhou period (771–256 BC), but not in the sense of stir frying.[6] Dry stirring was used in the Han dynasty (206 BC – 221 AD) to parch grain.[2] Although there are no surviving records of Han dynasty stir frying, archaeological evidence of woks and the tendency to slice food thinly indicate that the technique was likely used for cooking.[7]
The term chao appears for the first time in the sense of "stir frying" in the Qimin Yaoshu, a sixth-century agricultural manual, including in a recipe for scrambled eggs. In sources from the Tang dynasty (618–907), chao refers not to a cooking technique, but to a method for roasting tea leaves. It reappears as a cooking method in a dozen recipes from the Song dynasty (960–1279). The Song period is when the Chinese started to use vegetable oil for frying instead of animal fats. Until then, vegetable oil had been used chiefly in lamps.[2]

Historically, stir frying was not as important a technique as boiling or steaming, since the oil needed for stir frying was expensive. The technique became increasingly popular in the late Ming dynasty (1368–1644),[8] in part because the wood and charcoal used to fire stoves were becoming increasingly expensive near urban centers, and stir-frying could cook food quickly without wasting fuel.[9] "The increasingly commercial nature of city life" in the late Ming and Qing (1644–1912) periods also favored speedy methods.[2] But even as stir frying became an important method in Chinese cuisine, it did not replace other cooking techniques. For instance, "only five or six of over 100 recipes recorded in the sixteenth-century novel Jin Ping Mei are stir fry recipes and wok dishes accounted for only 16 percent of the recipes in the most famous eighteenth century recipe book, the Suiyuan shidan".[2]
By the late Qing, most Chinese kitchens were equipped with a wok range (chaozao 炒灶 or paotai zao 炮臺灶) convenient for stir-frying because it had a large hole in the middle to insert the bottom of a wok into the flames.[2]

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Stir Fry Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe,Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

source:- Google.com.pk

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Biography


Vegetable Pulao or Pilaf is a rice dish mixed with vegetables and mildly flavored with the spices like Cardamom, Cloves and Cinnamon to give it an aromatic flavor. Here is a little bit on the history of Pulao/Pilaf (Source:Wikipedia):

The English term pilaf is borrowed directly from Turkish, but all these terms ultimately derive from (Classical) Persian پلو , which is pronounced [paˈlau] in Persian (Dari), and in standard Iranian Persian, polów. In Urdu is pronounced pulāo پلاو. Depending on the local cuisine, it may also contain a variety of meat and vegetables. Pilaf and similar dishes are common to Middle Eastern, Central and South Asian, East African, Latin American, and Caribbean cuisines.

The recipe I have here is the Indian version of the Pilaf. I got the basic version of this recipe from one of my friend's mother (Thank you Thankam Aunty!). We had a dinner at their place where aunty made this Pulao and my son could not stop eating it. So I had to get the recipe from her.
Delicately flavored rice, sautéed in ghee and flavored with whole spices like cumin, cloves etc. Just like the Indian cuisine there are many varieties of pulao.
Pulao is a simple word for pilaf. A pilaf is a dish that has some kind of whole grain often rice that is browned in oil and then cooked in a seasoned broth. In the case of a vegetable pulao, any variety of vegetables can be added such as potatoes, broccoli, cauliflower, onions, or carrots. A variety of spices also can be used such as ginger, cardamom, tumeric, or salt. The vegetables should be cooked separately until tender. The rice should be cooked with the spices of your choice. All items should be tossed together and then served.

i will give you a recipe for tomato pulav
Basmati rice - 1 cup , Cinnamon - as required, Cloves - 2, Cardamom - 2, Green chilli - 2, Garlic - 3 cloves, Onion - 1/2 (finely chopped), Chilli powder - 1/2 tsp, Turmeric powder - 1/4 tsp, Tomato juice - 1? cup, coriander leaves- as required (chopped), Salt - to taste ,Oil - as required..
Heat Oil in a pan. Add Cinnamon, Cloves, Cardamom, Green chilli, Garlic, Onion, Chilli powder, Turmeric powder and Salt, fry them well.
Then add tomato juice and allow it to boil.
Then add Rice, mix it well and allow it to cook in a cooker. Once its cooked, switch off the flame, leave for 15 minutes and then open it.
add chopped coriander leaves mix once and serve.. you can also add fried cashews for garnishing.
Ingredients:Basmati rice 1 cup,ghee 1tbs, ginger garlic paste 1/4 tbs,white pepper powder 1/4 spoon, garam masala powder 1/4 spoon,vegetables(beans, carrot, potatoes,cauliflower)chopped.one onion chopped, fried cashewnuts,coriander leaves.1 & 1/2 cup water.

Procedure: boil the cooker then add ghee.To this add chopped onion then stirr well.when it turns light brown add vegetables and stirr again.then add ginger garlic paste, white pepper powder , garam masala powder and stirr well.then add well washed rice and water then place the lid and allow to come 2 whistles.after some time you please open the lid and mix the rice with chopped coriander leaves.before serving put cashewnuts over the rice . In place of water you can use coconut milk.

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pulao Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe ,Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

source:- Google.com.pk

Vegetable Pie Recipe Biography

A pie is a baked dish which is usually made of a pastry dough casing that covers or completely contains a filling of various sweet or savoury ingredients.

Pies are defined by their crusts. A filled pie (also single-crust or bottom-crust), has pastry lining the baking dish, and the filling is placed on top of the pastry but left open. A top-crust pie, which may also be called a cobbler, has the filling in the bottom of the dish and is covered with a pastry or other covering before baking. A two-crust pie has the filling completely enclosed in the pastry shell. Shortcrust pastry is a typical kind of pastry used for pie crusts, but many things can be used, including baking powder biscuits, mashed potatoes, and crumbs.
A chicken pie with a traditional pie bird
The need for nutritious, easy-to-store, easy-to-carry, and long-lasting foods on long journeys, in particular at sea, was initially solved by taking live food along with a butcher or cook. However, this took up additional space on what were either horse-powered treks or small ships, reducing the time of travel before additional food was required. This resulted in early armies adopting the style of hunter-foraging.
The introduction of the baking of processed cereals including the creation of flour, provided a more reliable source of food. Egyptian sailors carried a flat brittle bread loaf of millet bread called dhourra cake, while the Romans had a biscuit called buccellum.[1]
The first pies appeared around 9500 BC, in the Egyptian Neolithic period or New Stone Age. During this period the use of stone tools shaped by polishing or grinding, the domestication of plants and animals, the establishment of permanent villages, and the practice of crafts such as pottery and weaving became common. Early pies were in the form of flat, round or freeform crusty cakes called galettes consisting of a crust of ground oats, wheat, rye, or barley containing honey as a treat inside. These galettes developed into a form of early sweet pastry or desserts, evidence of which can be found on the tomb walls of the Pharaoh Ramesses II, who ruled from 1304 to 1237 BC, located in the Valley of the Kings.[2] Sometime before 2000 BC, a recipe for chicken pie was written on a tablet in Sumer.[3]
Ancient Greeks are believed to have originated pie pastry. In the plays of Aristophanes (5th century BC) there are mentions of sweetmeats including small pastries filled with fruit. Nothing is known of the actual pastry used, but the Greeks certainly recognized the trade of pastry-cook as distinct from that of baker. (When fat is added to a flour-water paste it becomes a pastry.) The Romans made a plain pastry of flour, oil, and water to cover meats and fowls which were baked, thus keeping in the juices. (The covering was not meant to be eaten; it filled the role of what was later called puff paste') A richer pastry, intended to be eaten, was used to make small pasties containing eggs or little birds which were among the minor items served at banquets.[4]
The 1st century Roman cookbook Apicius makes various mentions of recipes which involve a pie case.[5] By 160 BC, Roman statesman Marcus Porcius Cato (234-149 BC) who wrote De Agri Cultura, notes the recipe for the most popular pie/cake called Placenta. Also called libum by the Romans, it was more like a modern day cheesecake on a pastry base, often used as an offering to the gods. With the development of the Roman Empire and its efficient road transport, pie cooking spread throughout Europe.[2]
Pies remained as a staple of traveling and working peoples in the colder northern European countries, with regional variations based on both the locally grown and available meats, as well as the locally farmed cereal crop. The Cornish pasty is an excellent adaptation of the pie to a working man's daily food needs.[2]
Medieval cooks had restricted access to ovens due to their costs of construction and need for abundant supplies of fuel. Pies could be easily cooked over an open fire, while partnering with a baker allowed them to cook the filling inside their own locally defined casing. The earliest pie-like recipes refer to coffyns (the word actually used for a basket or box), with straight sealed sides and a top; open top pies were referred to as traps. This may also be the reason why early recipes focus on the filling over the surrounding case, with the partnership development leading to the use of reusable earthenware pie cases which reduced the use of expensive flour.[6]
The first reference to "pyes" as food items appeared in England (in a Latin context) as early as the 12th century, but no unequivocal reference to the item with which the article is concerned is attested until the 14th century (Oxford English Dictionary sb pie).[2]
Song birds at the time were a fine delicacy, and protected by Royal Law. At the coronation of eight-year old English King Henry VI (1422–1461) in 1429, "Partryche and Pecock enhackyll" pie was served, consisting of cooked peacock mounted in its skin on a peacock filled pie. Cooked birds were frequently placed by European royal cooks on top of a large pie to identify its contents, leading to its later adaptation in pre-Victorian times as a porcelain ornament to release of steam and identify a good pie.[2]
The Pilgrim fathers and early settlers brought their pie recipes with them to America, adapting to the ingredients and techniques available to them in the New World. Their first pies were based on berries and fruits pointed out to them by the Native North Americans.[2] Pies allowed colonial cooks to stretch ingredients and also used round shallow pans to literally "cut corners," and create a regional variation of shallow pie.[7]

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Vegetable Pie Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe, Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

source:- Google.com.pk

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Biography

Soup is a primarily liquid food, generally served warm (but may be cool or cold), that is made by combining ingredients such as meat and vegetables with stock, juice, water, or another liquid. Hot soups are additionally characterized by boiling solid ingredients in liquids in a pot until the flavors are extracted, forming a broth.
Traditionally, soups are classified into two main groups: clear soups and thick soups. The established French classifications of clear soups are bouillon and consommé. Thick soups are classified depending upon the type of thickening agent used: purées are vegetable soups thickened with starch; bisques are made from puréed shellfish or vegetables thickened with cream; cream soups may be thickened with béchamel sauce; and veloutés are thickened with eggs, butter, and cream. Other ingredients commonly used to thicken soups and broths include egg,[1] rice, lentils, flour, and grains; many popular soups also include carrots and potatoes.

Soups are similar to stews, and in some cases there may not be a clear distinction between the two; however, soups generally have more liquid than stews.[2]
Evidence of the existence of soup can be found as far back as about 20,000 BC.[3] Boiling was not a common cooking technique until the invention of waterproof containers (which probably came in the form of clay vessels). Animal hides and watertight baskets of bark or reeds were used before this. To boil the water hot rocks were used. This method was also used to cook acorns and other plants.

The word soup comes from French soupe ("soup", "broth"), which comes through Vulgar Latin suppa ("bread soaked in broth") from a Germanic source, from which also comes the word "sop", a piece of bread used to soak up soup or a thick stew.
The word restaurant (meaning "[something] restoring") was first used in France in the 16th century, to refer to a highly concentrated, inexpensive soup, sold by street vendors, that was advertised as an antidote to physical exhaustion. In 1765, a Parisian entrepreneur opened a shop specializing in such soups. This prompted the use of the modern word restaurant for the eating establishments.
In the US, the first colonial cookbook was published by William Parks in Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1742, based on Eliza Smith's The Compleat Housewife; or Accomplished Gentlewoman's Companion and it included several recipes for soups and bisques. A 1772 cookbook, The Frugal Housewife, contained an entire chapter on the topic. English cooking dominated early colonial cooking; but as new immigrants arrived from other countries, other national soups gained popularity. In particular, German immigrants living in Pennsylvania were famous for their potato soups. In 1794, Jean Baptiste Gilbert Payplat dis Julien, a refugee from the French Revolution, opened an eating establishment in Boston called The Restorator, and became known as "The Prince of Soups". The first American cooking pamphlet dedicated to soup recipes was written in 1882 by Emma Ewing: Soups and Soup Making.
Soup is often served as the starter, first course, or entrée before a main meal. In 1970, Richard Olney gave the place of the entrée in a French full menu: "A dinner that begins with a soup and runs through a fish course, an entrée, a sorbet, a roast, salad, cheese and dessert, and that may be accompanied by from three to six wines, presents a special problem of orchestration".[8]

Mirepoix consists of carrot, onion and celery and is often used for soup stocks and soups.
In the English language, the word "soup" has developed several uses in phrase.
Alphabet soup, a large number of acronyms used by an administration. The term has its roots in a common tomato-based soup containing pasta shaped in the letters of the alphabet.
"In the soup" refers to being in a bad situation.[12]
Primordial soup, the organic mixture leading to the development of life.
A soup kitchen, a place that serves prepared food of any kind to the homeless.
Souperism, the practice of bible societies during the Irish Great Famine to feed the hungry in exchange for religious instruction. The expression 'took the soup' is used to refer to those who converted at the behest of these organizations offers of food.
"Stone soup", a popular children's fable about a poor man who encourages villagers to share their food with him by telling them that he can make soup with a stone.
Duck soup, a simple soup, stands for a task that is particularly easy.
Duck Soup, title of a Marx Brothers' film in 1933.
Tag soup, poorly coded HTM

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Best Vegetable Soup Recipe Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes, Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

source:- Google.com.pk

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Biography

The United States Department of Agriculture’s 2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, released in January 2005, recommends various numbers of servings of fruits and vegetables depending on an individual’s calorie needs – ranging from 4 to 13 servings, or 2 to 6.5 cups, per day, yet research indicates that over 90 percent of Americans do not meet their recommended amount. To meet these recommendations, most need to more than double the amount of fruits and vegetables they currently eat. Closing the consumption gap requires a national call to action. Fruits & Veggies—More Matters provides a national call to action designed to encourage Americans to eat more fruits and vegetables for their better health.

Produce for Better Health Foundation launched a consumer website in March 2007 aimed at educating Gen X moms about the Fruits & Veggies—More Matters campaign and the benefits of eating more fruits and vegetables. The Fruits & Veggies—More Matters website offers nutrition information, selection and storage advice, recipes, shopping and meal planning advice, tips for increasing produce consumption, and an abundance of other useful information about fruits and vegetables. Over 300 short informational videos demonstrate how to check different fruits and vegetables for ripeness, outline proper storage methods, present healthy and quick recipes, and offer other fun and useful tidbits about fruits and vegetables.

The Fruits & Veggies—More Matters campaign stresses that it’s easy to eat more fruits and vegetables because all forms (fresh, frozen, canned, dried and 100 percent juice) are nutritious.The Fruits & Veggies—More Matters logo can be found on select packages of fresh, frozen, canned, dried and 100 percent fruit and vegetable juice products in stores.[1]
1991 - The National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the Produce for Better Health Foundation creates the 5 A Day for Better Health Program.
October 2005 - CDC becomes lead federal agency and national health authority for the 5 A Day program.
March 2007 - The 5 A Day program becomes the National Fruit and Vegetable Program. The new campaign is Fruits & Veggies—More Matters.[2]
In botany, a fruit is a part of a flowering plant that derives from specific tissues of the flower, one or more ovaries, and in some cases accessory tissues. Fruits are the means by which these plants disseminate seeds. Many of them that bear edible fruits, in particular, have propagated with the movements of humans and animals in a symbiotic relationship as a means for seed dispersal and nutrition, respectively; in fact, humans and many animals have become dependent on fruits as a source of food.[1] Fruits account for a substantial fraction of the world's agricultural output, and some (such as the apple and the pomegranate) have acquired extensive cultural and symbolic meanings.

In common language usage, "fruit" normally means the fleshy seed-associated structures of a plant that are sweet or sour and edible in the raw state, such as apples, oranges, grapes, strawberries, bananas, and lemons. On the other hand, the botanical sense of "fruit" includes many structures that are not commonly called "fruits", such as bean pods, corn kernels, wheat grains, and tomatoes.[2][3]

The section of a fungus that produces spores is also called a fruiting body.[4]
n the culinary sense of these words, a fruit is usually any sweet-tasting plant product, especially those associated with seeds; a vegetable is any savory or less sweet plant product; and a nut is any hard, oily, and shelled plant product.[5]

These culinary vegetables that are botanically fruit include cucurbits (e.g., squash, pumpkin, and cucumber), tomatoes, peas, beans, corn, eggplant, and sweet pepper. In addition, some spices, such as allspice and chilies, are fruits, botanically speaking.[6] In contrast, rhubarb is often referred to as a fruit, because it is used to make sweet desserts such as pies, though only the petiole (leaf stalk) of the rhubarb plant is edible.[7] Edible gymnosperm seeds are often given fruit names, e.g., pine nuts, ginkgo nuts.

Botanically, a cereal grain, such as corn, wheat or rice, is also a kind of fruit, termed a caryopsis. However, the fruit wall is very thin, and is fused to the seed coat, so almost all of the edible grain is actually a seed.[8]

Many common terms for seeds and fruit do not correspond to the botanical classifications. In botany, seeds are ripened ovules; fruits are the ripened ovaries or carpels that contain the seeds and a nut is a type of fruit and not a seed.[6]

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Fruit And Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy