Bazsites.com Jellies
Directory Topics
On the Web
- International Jelly and Preserve Association - Information about jams, jellies, preserves and fruitspreads, including a calculator comparing nutritional information, an interactive map showing where popular fruits are grown, history of jams and jellies, and recipes.
- Sweet-Tart Berry Jelly - Made with lemon gelatin and sliced strawberries.
- Mom's Pepper Jelly - Includes hot and sweet peppers.
- Fool Proof Grape Jelly - Simple recipe calling for grapes and sugar.
- Dandelion Jelly - Includes dandelion blossoms, sugar, and lemon juice.
- LeBlanc Jellies - These are no ordinary jellies. Be creative and taste the excitement. LeBlanc's Cane Jelly. Made with Louisiana Sugar Cane.
- Kudzu Jelly - Kudzu jelly for sale. Includes some research on kudzu plants.
- Napa Valley Wine Jelly - Sold in gift boxes, by the jar or case. Selections include traditional wine jellies plus several made with spices.
- Josas Jellies - Homemade jams, jellies, salsa, vinegars, sugar free jelly, pickles and relish.
- Rhubarb Cherry Jelly - Made with cherry gelatin and cherry pie filling in addition to fresh rhubarb.
Wikipedia Articles
- Coelenterata - Coelenterata is an obsolete yet common term encompassing two animal phyla, the Ctenophora (comb jellies) and the Cnidaria (coral animals, true jellies, sea anemones, sea pens, and their allies). The taxon name comes from the Greek "koilos" ("hollow"), referring to the hollow body cavity common to these two phyla.
- York Fruits - York Fruits are a brand of fruit flavour jellies, formerly made by Terry's (in York) and now by Kraft Foods.
- Sodium tartrate - Sodium tartrate (Na2C4H4O6) is used as an emulsifier and a binding agent in food products such as jellies, margarine, and sausage casings.
- Jabuticaba - The Jabuticaba (also called Brazilian Grape Tree, Jaboticaba, Jabotica, Guaperu, Guapuru, Hivapuru, SabarĂ¡ and Ybapuru) is a fruit-bearing tree native to Brazil. The fruit is purplish black, with a white pulp; it can be eaten raw or be used to make jellies and drinks (plain juice or wine).
- Topical anesthetic - ... used to numb the surface of a body part. They can be used to numb the front of the eye, the inside of the nose, the throat, the skin, the ear, the anus, and the genital area Topical anesthetics are available in creams, ointments, aerosols, sprays, lotions, and jellies [http://www.