History
The word raisin dates back to Middle English and is a loanword from Old French; in Old French and French, raisin means "grape," while, in French, a dried grape is referred to as a raisin sec, or "dry grape." The Old French word in turn developed from the Latin word racemus, "a bunch of grapes. [1]
Other Ingredient Information
Products containing Raisins
The percentage represents the approximate total number of food products from UPC Food Search's data that contain the ingredient, "Raisins".
The data is calculated from UPC Food Search's product data only, and is not meant to reflect all food products regionally or globally.
Source(s) Derived From |
Plant Sources |
Natural or Artificial? |
Natural |
References |
- Raisin - Wikipedia
|
Aliases (Also Known As)
|
Black Raisins Dried Grapes Jumbo Raisins Natural Seedless Raisins Raisin Paste Seedless Raisins Sultana Raisins Thompson Raisins
Color Key - (Click/Tap to View)
- Natural
- Natural & Possibly Unsafe
- Artificial
- Artificial & Possibly Unsafe
- Both (Can be derived from Natural & Artificial Sources)
- Both (Can be derived from Natural & Artificial Sources) & Possibly Unsafe
|
Revision History
Action |
User |
Date/Time |
Ingredient added | UPC Food Search | January 1, 2009 @ 2:14 AM |
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