Lucuma, the rich in beta-carotene andean fruit

Lucuma, the rich in beta-carotene andean fruit

LUCUMA POWDER SUPPLIER

The Lucuma fruit (Pouteria lucuma) is native from the Peruvian Andes. It has a high content of beta-carotene and gives a pleasant and sweet flavor. Organic Lucuma powder is used in the food industry and food supplements around the world.

At AMAZON ANDES we are producers, suppliers and exporters of organic products derived from Lucuma (powder or flour). We offer wholesale prices for importers and distributors. We are suppliers of the best raw material from the Andean-Amazonian area in Peru.

We have an active certificate by Control Union Peru for USDA-NOP, EUROPE, CANADA and JAPAN. We have FDA certified facilities. We also offer the EOM service or private label in the following products:

  • Organic Lucuma powder.
  • Frozen lucuma pulp.
  • Dehydrated Lucuma.

We have HACCP and GMP quality certifications by NSF. Batch certificates of analysis and samples are available.

We are the best supplier alternative from origin. The best andean Lucuma from Peru.

ORIGIN OF LUCUMA

Lucuma (Pouteria lucuma) is a fruit native to the inter-Andean valleys of Peru, Ecuador and northern Chile. Chroniclers and historians report its abundance in Peru, having found images molded in huacos of the Mochica culture. These testimonies corroborate an ancestral use as part of the diet of populations that settled in localities on the coast and mountains of the country.

The fruit is a globose berry, flattened or somewhat elongated, green or yellowish. It measures between 7 and 14 cm in diameter.

The departments with the highest production of lucuma in Peru are Lima, Ayacucho, La Libertad, Cajamarca and Huancavelica.

Archaeological research places its domestication in the inter-Andean valleys of the pre-Inca peoples, where the consumption of its fruit and the use of its wood are extensively documented in the pictorial representations of the native Amerindians. The oldest of these date back to the 8th millennium BC. C. in the region called Callejón de Huaylas in Ancash. The Moche culture represents its art to the lucuma, as part of its fascination with agricultural products. Its wood was used for the construction of the Pachacámac sanctuary where in 1938 a trunk of singular dimensions carved as a totemic figure was found.

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