نتایج جستجو برای: fruit sugar

تعداد نتایج: 114222  

Journal: :Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2008
Jean-Baptiste Bassene Liliane Berti Elodie Carcouet Claudie Dhuique-Mayer Anne-Laure Fanciullino Jean Bouffin Patrick Ollitrault Yann Froelicher

Sugar, organic acid, and carotenoid are the most important indicators of fruit taste and nutritional and organoleptic quality. These components were studied on fruit pulp of the cybrid between Willow leaf mandarin ( Citrus deliciosa Ten.) and Eureka lemon [ Citrus limon (L.) Burm.] and the two parents. The cybrid possessed nuclear and chloroplast genomes of Eureka lemon plus mitochondria from W...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2014
Cuong V Nguyen Julia T Vrebalov Nigel E Gapper Yi Zheng Silin Zhong Zhangjun Fei James J Giovannoni

Fruit ripening is the summation of changes rendering fleshy fruit tissues attractive and palatable to seed dispersing organisms. For example, sugar content is influenced by plastid numbers and photosynthetic activity in unripe fruit and later by starch and sugar catabolism during ripening. Tomato fruit are sinks of photosynthate, yet unripe green fruit contribute significantly to the sugars tha...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1984
J S Pate M B Peoples C A Atkins

The vasculature of the dorsal suture of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata [L.] Walp) fruits bled a sugar-rich exudate when punctured with a fine needle previously cooled in liquid N(2). Bleeding continued for many days at rates equivalent to 10% of the estimated current sugar intake of the fruit. A phloem origin for the exudate was suggested from its high levels (0.4-0.8 millimoles per milliliter) of s...

2009
H. ČížkoVá R. ŠeVČík A. RAJCHl M. VoldřICH

Commercial fruit baby food is a preserved fruit product usually made with fruit purees, sugar, water and variable additives (thickening agents, antioxidants, etc.). As the foodstuffs intended for particular nutritional uses, baby foods for infants and young children conforms to a set of strict guidelines e.g. maximum levels for pesticide residues, microbiological contamination, addition of addi...

Journal: :Hippokratia 2013
D Papandreou E Andreou A Heraclides I Rousso

BACKGROUND AND AIM Recently, considerable attention has been given to beverage intake as a source of calories which may be linked to pediatric obesity. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the beverage intake in school children and adolescents aged 7 to 15 years old. METHODS Six hundred and seven (607) out of 655 children participated in the study. One hundred percent fruit juice were cla...

2011
A. Turhan N. Ozmen M. S. Serbeci V. Seniz

Turhan A., Ozmen N., Serbeci M.S., Seniz V., 2011. Effects of grafting on different rootstocks on tomato fruit yield and quality. Hort. Sci. (Prague), 38: 142–149. The aim of the study was to find effects of tomato grafting on another cultivar. The tomato cultivars used as scions were Yeni Talya, Swanson and Beril. Cultivars used as rootstocks were Beaufort and Arnold. Cleft grafting methods we...

Journal: :Archives of internal medicine 2008
Julie R Palmer Deborah A Boggs Supriya Krishnan Frank B Hu Martha Singer Lynn Rosenberg

BACKGROUND Type 2 diabetes mellitus is an increasingly serious health problem among African American women. Consumption of sugar-sweetened drinks was associated with an increased risk of diabetes in 2 studies but not in a third; however, to our knowledge, no data are available on African Americans regarding this issue. Our objective was to examine the association between consumption of sugar-sw...

2014

Proteins Grains and Starches Canned fish Tuna in a pouch Canned beef stew Canned salmon Bean soup Canned and dried beans Canned chili Nut butter Canned nuts Instant rice Dried pasta Noodle mixes Macaroni and cheese (mix or microwavable) Cold cereal Hot cereal mixes Oatmeal Crackers Granola bars Instant mashed potatoes Dairy Vegetables Instant breakfast drinks (non-refrigerated) Canned vegetable...

Journal: :The Journal of family practice 2009
Mark B Stephens Meaghan P Keville Nathanael E Hathaway Susan K Kendall

Children should be at least 6 months of age and parents should provide only 100% fruit juice in a cup (not a bottle). Intake should be limited to 4 to 6 oz a day until 12 months of age. It's important to reiterate to parents that breastfeeding is the preferred source of infant nutrition for the first 6 (preferably 12) months of life. Sugar-sweetened fruit drinks have been linked to excess weigh...

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