Yes. There are beneficial live active cultures in all commercially prepared yogurts in the dairy aisle. The frozen variety does not contain active cultures.
It is unknown why sandwiches are served with pickles. Some say that they are a good combination. Others say that they are clueless. It's just a matter of opinion.
According to the source in the Related Links, McDonald's uses a Grade A low-fat milk in their yogurt that contains active cultures.
live cultures can be found mostly in foods that were once living or come from animal. a few examples, are meat, bread, cheese, and milk. these are the most common foods that contain live cultures. about milk though, when milk first comes out of the cow, it has plenty of live cultures in it but most milk we drink doesn't. this is because all milk in America is pasteurized. during pasteurization, most live cultures are killed. this might sound good to you but when milk is pasteurized, 75 percent of good bacteria and healthy minerals are killed. this means that it takes three cups of milk to get the value of one unpasteurized cup. if you can find milk that isn't pasteurized, it will have live cultures. back to the subject, cheese, bread and meat are the most common foods that have live cultures because unpasteurized milk is illegal.
No, pickles are not fruity. Unless you have fruity pickles.
Pickles can be open for weeks! Acid in pickles kill germs and protect the pickles.
pickles pickles
Dill pickles.
McDonalds manufactures it own pickles, but the style of pickles they use are dill pickles.
Aliens are not pickles. Pickles are really !!!!!FROG EGGS!!!!!Coment:
80,000 pickles of course!! its in the question!!!
There is no standard collective noun for 'pickles', in which case a noun suitable for the situation can be used, for example, a jar of pickles, a barrel of pickles, a pint of pickles, etc.