

GIANT CORN CUZCO
Are mature and dry beans white corn, cereal from the species "Zea mays L." grass grown for food in the mountain valleys of the Urubamba area in Cusco, Peru.
HS Code 1005.90.90.10.
Employment As homogeneous food, fit for human consumption, has proteins, starches, sugars and fats and devido it is a very almilaceo corn, soft, uniform and exceptional size, cooking in Peru in myriad ways: baked, roasted , roasted, stewed, tortillas, etc.
Moreover, in the international market and especially in Spain and Japan, it is used in the preparation of salty snacks (snacks), having the advantage of having a lower fat, calories and be easier to digest than other substitutes such as peanuts, pistachio nuts, etc. Features Giant Cusco Corn is 1st quality, due to quality control, which begins in the harvest of selected fields, preventive disinfection, cleaning, sorting, grading by machine and hand (HPS), calibration, reached base and storage. The whole process under strict sanitary control. Color: White Calibre No.1 (24/27 grains / ounce) Gauge No.2 (28/32 grains / ounce) Humidity: max. 14 The new crops are available annually from the month of June, there own production of over 100 tonnes monthly until March next year.
PEELED CORN DRY
Commercial Description: It belongs to the species Zea mays L. Dry grain is a good sized flat round yellowish-creamy color. Rich in proteins, starches and sugars. It occurs in the sacred valley of the Incas in Urubamba, Cusco - Peru. Once harvested it is disinfected and then go through a process of washing and scrubbing with a special mechanism thus removing the shell, to finally be dried, sorted, graded and packed for export. The whole process under adequate quality control and health.





Paruro giant named Juan De La Cruz Sihuana and was born around 1875 in Llusco, Chumbivilcas Province, Department of Cusco. Height 2.10 m and weight of 136 kg. Photographed in 1925 by Martin Chambi, appears in the Daily Variety on October 4, 1925.
Paruro giant has a long face, prominent and sunburned cheekbones and cold, strong and aquiline nose, full lips, slightly parted, and broader than the forehead chin; takes the folded poncho and sweater as a rag; has a gnarled hand on the shoulder of the mestizo, who looks at him from below, and the other hand, where the veins seem ties rooted in his skin, holding the inevitable lluch'u, surely it seeped down below the ears to ward off the frigid highlands blow; their sandals, whose thin soles seem flattened by the weight of his body, but no buckles straps across through his fingers and tied to the ankle. His pants cloth, not really exist, since both seem to patch a single patch.