in a van then to a company then to a store.
Organic foods can be processed, packaged, transported, and stored, but the shelf life may be shorter than non-organic foods, because they do not contain the preservatives that non-organic foods do.
paper bags ontruckes
Cornmeal and cornflour do not typically contain monosodium glutamate (MSG) as they are primarily made from ground corn. However, some processed or flavored cornmeal and cornflour products may include MSG or other flavor enhancers, so it's essential to check the ingredient labels. If you're concerned about MSG, opt for pure or organic varieties.
use "I can't believe its not cornflour"
Cornmeal comes from grinding corn and cornflour comes from grinding corn kernels
cornflour and water
in a car
The phloem
A little cornflour will do the trick.
diabetic people can use cornflour and custurd powder?
Not in all recipes; for most baking recipes substituting plain flour for cornflour will not work, since cornflour has no gluten (which is what makes dough springy) and it requires far more hydration. Adding some cornflour to the flour in baking will result in lighter baked goods, but only until the total flour is 5% cornflour; after that the baked good gets progressively more dense and inedible. Cornflour is useful for thickening custards, which plain flour is not so good at. But you cannot bake normally with cornflour. Both cornflour and wheat flour have a similar calorie content, wheatflour is lower in the glycemic load (GL) index compared to cornflour, and whereas cornflour is considered "highly inflammitory" (i.e likely to cause a reaction), wheatflour is only considered "inflammitory."
No.