
- herbs & specialties
- as good as it gets!
- grown in the U.S. & abroad
- as good as it gets!
- herbs & specialties
Infinite
Herbs &
Specialties
As Good As It Gets!
Infinite Herbs is an organization founded on freshness! Our state of the art farms and packaging facilities produce some of the finest products in the market
Infinite Herbs is an organization founded on freshness! Our state of the art farms and packaging facilities produce some of the finest products in the market
All Infinite Herbs organic products are USDA organic certified. Look for the USDA Organic seal on our packaging. We are committed to providing our clients with the most up to date certifications to assure them of compliance to food safety.
Infinite Herbs US owned farms are located in Florida and California. Other growing locations include ; New York , Virginia , Indiana , Hawaii, Massachusetts and abroad locations in Colombia and Mexico. Our distribution centers are located in Miami , Chicago, and Boston. Infinite Herbs is proud to provide more than 200 jobs in the US and 200 abroad.
We supply to our customers Point of Sale materials such as racks to help display the product as well as we do promotions and develope sales material such as flyers to push sales through impulse purchase. We participate in many trade shows to back our product and brand to existing and new clients.
Romanesco is a part of the Brassica family, and like its fellow members cabbage and kale, the vegetable is loaded with vitamins C and K. It’s also rich in fiber, protective carotenoids and a set of phytochemicals that may protect our bodies against molecular degeneration.
Like so many other great beauties, Romanesco’s season in the sun is quite brief. Because it’s grown in a few key parts of the world – namely Italy and part of the eastern United States – a select, lucky few are treated to multiple Romanesco seasons.
Vertus Savoy Cabbage produces flat round heads of greyish-green leaves which are very hardy. They are late to mature and stands well without splitting.
The hardiest of all the cabbage family. Familiar for their crinkled and blistered leaves, they will withstand the hardest of our winters to give welcome green stuff to your dinners when fresh produce is in short supply
Cauliflower is high in fiber and water. Both are important for preventing constipation, maintaining a healthy digestive tract, and lowering the risk of colon cancer.
Cauliflower, not being one of the easiest of vegetables to grow is certainly regarded by many old hands as the test of a real gardener. But with good planning, regular care and a small dose of common sense, you can pretty much have cauliflower on the table all year round.