FOB Price
Get Latest Price3.5 / Kilogram
|Minimum Order
Place of Origin:
Shaanxi,China
Price for Minimum Order:
Minimum Order Quantity:
200 Kilogram
Packaging Detail:
10kg net per bag. /carton. About 15MT in one 28.75 CBM We can also try our best to follow the client
Delivery Time:
10-20 days
Supplying Ability:
1000 Metric Ton per Year
Payment Type:
Western Union, T/T
連絡先担当者 Ms. Annie
1st floor 36 gaoxin 6 road, Xian, Shaanxi
apricot kernel extract
There are two forms of the plant, one (often with white
flowers) producing sweet almonds, and the other (often with pink
flowers) producing bitter almonds. The kernel of the formercontains
a fixed oil and emulsion. As late as the early *0th century it was
used internally in medicine, with the stipulation that it must not
be adulterated with the bitter almond; it remains fairly popular in
alternative medicine, particularly as a carrier oil in
aromatherapy, but has fallen out of prescription among doctors.
Blanched almondsThe bitter almond is rather broader and
shorter than the sweet almond, and contains about *0% of the fixed
oil which also occurs in sweet almonds. It also contains a ferment
emulsion which, in the presence of water, acts on a soluble
glucoside, amygdalin, yielding glucose, cyanide and the essential
oil of bitter almonds or benzaldehyde. Bitter almonds may yield
from 6 to 8% of prussic acid (also known as hydrogen cyanide).
Extract of bitter almond was once used medicinally but even in
small doses is severe and in larger doses can be deadly; the
prussic acid must be removed before consumption.
Sweet Almond:
Family: N.O. Rosaceae Botanical: Amygdalus communis
(LINN.) var. dulcis
Bitter Almond:
Family: N.O. Rosaceae Botanical: amygdalus communis
(LINN.) var. amara
There are several varieties of the Bitter Almond, the best
being imported from the south of France, and others from Sicily and
Northern Africa (Barbary), where it forms a staple article of
trade. The annual imports of Bitter Almonds to this country amount
normally to about **0 tons.
The seeds are used chiefly as a source of Almond Oil, but
yield a volatile oil, which is largely employed as a flavouring
agent.
Bitter Almonds are usually shorter, proportionately broader
and smaller, and less regular than the Sweet Almonds. They contain
about *0 per cent of the same fixed oil which occurs in the Sweet
Almond, and are free from starch. The bitter taste is
characteristic.