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Whole Dongar Green Peas

Whole Dongar Green Peas / हरा मटर

Regular price
Rs. 135.00
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Rs. 135.00
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Diabetic friendly, low GI food, rich in amino acid, selenium, vitamin B, weight loss friendly & reduces cholesterol

Suitable for ragda, sabzi, kachori, fried snack, patal bhaji, vatana usal & bengal ghugni

OOO Farms Whole Dongar Green Peas
Whole Dongar Green Peas
OOO Farms Whole Dongar Green Peas Package Frontside
OOO Farms Whole Dongar Green Peas in a Bowl

Additional Product Details

Description

Peas originated in the Mediterranean Basin and the Near East.

Peas are a valuable source of protein. Starch and fibre are a major component of peas. The properties of both their starch and fibre constituents make peas a low-glycemic index food, and hence beneficial in the prevention and management of type 2 diabetes.

Health Benefits

Good for Diabetes
Rich in Amino Acid Lysine
Promotes Weight Loss
Low GI Food
Good Source of Selenium
Rich in B Vitamins
Helps Reduce Cholesterol
Good Dietary Energy Value

Cooking Instructions

Whole Green Peas

1. Soak Green Peas overnight or for at least 6-8 hours.
2. Drain and Pressure Cook Peas for 1 Whistle on Medium flame and then simmer on low flame for about 10-15 mins.
3. Let Cool and then use in desired recipe.

Recommended Usage

RAGDA
SABZI
KACHORI
FRIED SNACK
PATAL BHAJI
VATANA USAL
BENGALI GHUGNI

Commonly Known As

English: DONGAR GREEN PEAS
Hindi: हरा मटर
Marathi: हरा मटर
Gujarati: લીલા વટાણા
Tamil: பட்டாணி
Telugu: పచ్చి బటానీ
Malayalam: പട്ടാണി
Kannada: ಬಟ್ಟನಿ
Punjabi: ਮੱਟਰ
Bengali: মাতার

History

The wild pea originated in the Mediterranean Basin and the Near East. The earliest archaeological finds of peas date from the late Neolithic era of current Greece, Syria, Turkey, Israel, Iraq and Jordan. The pea was also present in Georgia in the 5th millennium BC.

Farther east, the finds are younger. Peas were present in Afghanistan c. 2000 BC; in Harappan civilization around modern-day Pakistan
and western- and northwestern India in 2250–1750 BC. In the second half of the 2nd millennium BC, this legume crop appeared in the
Ganges Basin and southern India.