Yes, there are seeds in raisins. Grapes have very little seeds in them; and since a raisin is a dried grape, raisins have the very little seeds as well.
Raisins are neither nuts nor seeds; they are dehydrated grapes, meaning grapes that have had most of the water dried out of them.
Well, darling, you don't actually stone raisins. You soak them in hot water for a few minutes to plump them up. If you want to remove the seeds from grapes to make your own raisins, you can freeze them first and then easily pop out the seeds. But seriously, just buy a bag of seedless raisins at the store and save yourself the trouble.
Almost all are made from seedless grapes. I've never seen any with seeds.
Stoned raisins, which are raisins with the seeds removed, primarily come from the United States, particularly California. The state is known for its extensive grape production, especially for drying grapes into raisins. Other countries, like Turkey and Iran, also produce raisins, but California is the most prominent source of stoned raisins.
seeds, berries, mushrooms, rolled oats, raisins, nuts and love bread.
Honey, dried fruit (such as raisins or dates), nuts, grains or seeds such as flax.
A raisin is the dried fruit of the grape vine - a dried grape. While the pips in a rasin are probably no longer fertile, the pips in a grape are the seeds from which new grape vines may be grown.
raisins
raisins
Chickens seem to enjoy raisins/grapes, red tomatoes, melon scraps, sunflower seeds, grasshoppers, worms, and small mice.
They eat sunflower seeds, raisins, regular hamster food, fresh veggies, etc. Avoid citrus, chocolate, etc.
There are many healthy snack recipes including celery with peanut butter and raisins, sunflower seeds, carrot and zucchini frittatas and apples with honey.