Freeze Dried Bean Sprout
Freeze Dried Bean Sprout

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  • Product Name: Freeze Dried Bean Sprout
  • Product ID: N/A
  • HS Code: N/A
  • Certification: HACCP, KOSHER, FDA
  • Variety: N/A
  • Origin: N/A
  • Available Season: N/A
  • Samples Available: Yes
  • OEM Service: Yes
  • Port: Qingdao, Tanggu, Shanghai
  • Payment Terms: T/T, L/C
  • Delivery Terms: FOB, CNF, CIF
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Product Specifications

1)Name:Freeze Dried bean sprout

2)Purity: 100%

3)This product is made by FD tech, which keeps all the feature of the material. The quality is controlled by HACCP and ISO9001. There is no any preserved or artificial coloring in it

4)Packing:Inner packing:5-10kg/double polybag;Outer packing:Paper carton or according to clients' specification

5)Moisture: <5%

6)Origin: China

Raw Material Information

Mung bean sprouts are germinated by leaving them watered with 4 hours of daytime light and spending the rest of the day in the dark. Mung bean sprouts can be grown under artificial light for 4 hours over the period of a week. Fluorescent bulbs or incandescent light bulbs would be the best to use for mung bean sprouts.[citation needed] They are usually sold simply as "bean sprouts," and are known as dòu yá (豆芽, literally "bean sprout/germ"), yá cài (芽菜, literally "sprout vegetable"), or yín yá (银芽, literally "silver sprouts") in Chinese, and Hokkien (Min Nan),Kongnamool in Korean, moyashi in Japanese, tauge in Indonesian, taugeh in Malay, togue in Filipino, thua-ngok (ถั่วงอก) in Thai, and giá đậu or giá đỗ in Vietnamese.

Mung bean sprouts are stir fried as a vegetable accompaniment to a meal, usually with ingredients such as garlic, ginger, spring onions, or pieces of salted dried fish to add flavor. Uncooked bean sprouts are used in filling for Vietnamese spring rolls, as well as as a garnish for phở. They are a major ingredient in a variety of Malaysian and Peranakan cuisine including char kway teow, Hokkien mee, mee rebus, and pasembor. In Korea, slightly cooked mung bean sprouts, called sukjunamul (hangul: 숙주나물), are often served as a side dish. They are blanched: placed into boiling water for less than a minute, immediately cooled down in cold water, and mixed with sesame oil, garlic, salt, and often other ingredients. In the Philippines, mung bean sprouts are made into "lumpia roll" called lumpiang togue.

Mung bean sprouts are the major bean sprouts in most Asian countries. In Korea, soybean sprouts, called kongnamul (hangul: 콩나물) are more widely used in a variety of dishes.

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