No, they are not the same thing. Raisins are dried grapes. Prunes are dried plums.
It Depends really, you can get sundried raisins which are grapes left out in the sun until they dry out to form raisins.
Prunes, and dried grapes are raisins.
Raisins are wrinkly, dried grapes. Prunes are in the same category.
Dried grapes are called raisins.
Raisins, dried aprocots, dried tomatoes, prunes ( all of the ones that have been dehidrated ) other than that, none
Prunes generally have more wrinkles per area compared to raisins. This is because prunes are dried plums, and their drying process results in a more pronounced wrinkled texture. Raisins, which are dried grapes, tend to have a smoother surface, leading to fewer visible wrinkles. Therefore, when comparing the two, prunes are typically the wrinklier option.
No but raisins are grapes. Both raisins and grapes started as fruits on vines, but they didn't both get dried.
Grapes dried in the sun become raisins.
raisins are dried grapes, which are fruits.
If you mean raisins, they are dried grapes.
Many things can be. Some common ones are plums (prunes), grapes (raisins), olives, and tomatoes. also different jerkies