Sentences with phrase «skin of grapes»

Duh, the skin of the grapes.
One of the troubles with feeding grapes to babies is the skins of the grapes and another is their round size; these make for choking hazards.
You shouldn't give them to your toddler because the skin of grapes is difficult to break down.
His team at Harvard University have been looking at ways to wrap morsels of treats like ice cream, yoghurt and cheese in edible skins, similar to the skin of a grape or coconut.
The study looked at red wines, except from two areas in Washington where only white wines were produced, because they are made with the skin of grapes where arsenic that is absorbed from soil tends to concentrate.
Prior research has suggested that humans first began to use yeast after it was found on the skin of grapes, and it has been theorized that its use first began in China.
What it means: You may have seen this buzzy antioxidant, found in the skin of grapes listed on the packaging of beauty serums and creams touting its anti-aging properties.
By Kevin DiDonato MS, CSCS, CES Resveratrol is a powerful polyphenol found in red wine and in the skin of grapes.
Resveratrol is a natural polyphenolic compound (polygonum) found mainly in the skin of grapes and contains antioxidant and phytoestrogenic properties.
Basically, mould growth directly stimulates the skins of grapes to increase their resveratrol levels, but when fungicides are applied by farmers, that stimulation is ended.
This antioxidant is chemically related to reservatrol, another heart - healthy compound that is found in the skin of grapes.
Resveratrol, found in the skin of grapes has been shown to lower low - grade inflammation as well as decrease the associated bone loss10, 11.
Benzoyl peroxide and resveratrol (an antioxidant found in the skin of grapes) do not completely get in each other's way, making the combo a potent acne - fighter (according to a UCLA study).
Imagine for a second the skin of a grape or a coconut.
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