|
HS Code |
184756 |
| Product Name | Panda Bean Meal |
| Type | Feed Ingredient |
| Main Ingredient | Beans |
| Form | Meal |
| Intended Use | Animal Feed |
| Protein Content Percent | Approx. 45% |
| Fiber Content Percent | Approx. 6% |
| Moisture Content Percent | Max 12% |
| Color | Light Brown |
| Origin | China |
| Storage Condition | Cool and Dry Place |
| Shelf Life Months | 12 |
| Packaging Type | Bag |
| Net Weight Kg | 25 |
| Suitable Animals | Cattle, Poultry, Swine |
As an accredited Panda Bean Meal factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | Panda Bean Meal is packaged in a 25 kg durable, white woven sack with clear labeling, usage instructions, and product branding. |
| Shipping | **Panda Bean Meal** should be shipped in tightly sealed, moisture-proof bags or containers to prevent contamination and spoilage. Store in a cool, dry place, away from direct sunlight and incompatible substances. Label packages clearly, and comply with local regulations for transporting agricultural or feed materials. Avoid exposure to excessive heat or humidity. |
| Storage | Panda Bean Meal should be stored in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight and sources of moisture. Ensure the storage area is free from pests and contaminants. Keep the meal in tightly sealed, labeled containers or bags to maintain freshness and prevent absorption of odors. Avoid exposure to chemicals or strong-smelling substances. Use FIFO (first-in, first-out) inventory management. |
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Protein Content: Panda Bean Meal with 55% protein content is used in animal feed formulations, where it enhances growth rates and feed conversion efficiency. Moisture Level: Panda Bean Meal at ≤10% moisture level is used in aquaculture diets, where it ensures improved shelf stability and reduced spoilage. Particle Size: Panda Bean Meal with 80-micron median particle size is used in extrusion-based pet food production, where it promotes uniform mixing and pellet integrity. Ash Content: Panda Bean Meal containing <5% ash is used in broiler chicken rations, where it reduces mineral load and optimizes nutrient absorption. Solubility Index: Panda Bean Meal with a 78% solubility index is used in high-protein beverages, where it facilitates easy blending and rapid dispersion. Fat Content: Panda Bean Meal at ≤2% fat content is used in functional food ingredients, where it provides a low-fat protein source for health-focused formulations. Stability Temperature: Panda Bean Meal stable up to 120°C is used in baked snack applications, where it retains nutritional quality during processing. Antinutritional Factors: Panda Bean Meal with reduced trypsin inhibitor levels is used in swine feeds, where it supports better protein digestibility and animal health. Crude Fiber: Panda Bean Meal with 4% crude fiber is used in ruminant diets, where it aids in maintaining gut health and sustained energy release. Color Value: Panda Bean Meal with an L* value > 70 is used in baby food production, where it offers a light, appealing visual quality. |
Competitive Panda Bean Meal prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please call us at +8615371019725 or mail to admin@sinochem-nanjing.com.
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Tel: +8615371019725
Email: admin@sinochem-nanjing.com
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Spending years in fields, workshops, and fermentation tanks taught us the simple truth: plants respond best to what their roots can recognize. Panda Bean Meal is a product that draws on this understanding. Every bag comes from the harvests we’ve nurtured ourselves — not from grain shuffling but from actual, physical crops under real skies. The model PBM-88 represents the culmination of dozens of trial batches where quality started meaning something you can see and weigh, not just numbers on a spec sheet.
Let’s address the question growers and feed formulators often ask at the warehouse: what sets Panda Bean Meal apart from standard bean meals or meal blends found on the open market? While others often source raw material from commodity pools, we keep the harvest local and take responsibility for each processing step. Our staff walks the fields, negotiates weather, and inspects the quality before sending a single pod to the mill. What results is a meal with consistent color, texture, and moisture balance — so every sack feeds predictability into your process.
Other producers sometimes chase protein content at the expense of residual sugar or flavor compounds, which can affect digestibility and palatability. From our trials, Panda Bean Meal holds a protein concentration close to 44% — reliable for feed rations, but not so high that it stresses livestock digestion or leads to waste. Regular lab tests at key processing stages confirm that fiber remains moderate and anti-nutritional factors register below thresholds set by major feed mills. You will not find extraneous hulls or dockage that water down your formulation.
Harvest begins with select strains of legume beans chosen for both yield and resilience. We do not buy off-farm at auction, preferring full control from planting to harvest. Each load destined for Panda Bean Meal undergoes cleaning to remove soil, stones, and cracked seeds, and we keep the drying process slow enough to prevent case hardening or denaturation of proteins. After dehulling and milling, the cake cools naturally under circulating air — important for preventing mold growth or overheating, which has caused issues for others who rush to the finish line.
A few years back we experimented with a faster process, cutting corners on drying and chilling. The result was clear: the aroma turned harsh, and customers complained about reduced feed intake. The experience stuck with us. Now, every shift watches for aroma and uniform grind before packaging starts. No step gets automated without a technician cross-checking by hand.
Feed manufacturers, poultry integrators, and large dairies use Panda Bean Meal as a core protein source, particularly for its consistent fat and amino acid profile. Ranchers in dry regions rely on this meal when field peas become scarce or soya yields falter. Our plant protein is not just a straight substitute for soya. During droughts two years ago, several mid-sized farms turned to Panda Bean Meal and saw stable weight gain in their herds, without digestive upsets or off-feed periods.
Panda Bean Meal fits naturally into pelleting lines: the grind has been refined to minimize bridging and static that lead to jams. The meal’s moderate oil content works as an internal binder, reducing dust in the final feed. Reports from local feedlots confirm they rarely need to adjust mixing times or add emulsifiers.
Some brands chase laboratory numbers by pushing bean protein extraction harder, squeezing every last gram. That route leaves behind fiber clusters and tough shell fragments, which can scrape delicate guts or slow digestion. With Panda Bean Meal, regular feedback from nutritionists confirms a smoother gut passage. Pasture-raised animals and breeding stock, especially, exhibit stronger growth rates when the meal forms part of their ration, compared to meals with more fragmented fiber or uneven particle sizes.
We have learned not to ignore the experience of farm staff. Early batches occasionally drew complaints about clumping or off-smells. We used those reports to tighten screening, and for the last several seasons, barns smell clean and feed bins empty as scheduled. In species from broilers to heifers, feed conversion ratios track higher than national averages whenever Panda Bean Meal replaces unmarked, blended meals.
There is no need to hide standards behind technical jargon. Every lot of Panda Bean Meal we release follows the PBM-88 model profile. Typical analysis comes in as follows: protein close to 44%, crude fiber below 7%, oil (fat) content about 1.5%, and moisture consistently 11–12%. Ash stays low, which means your animals get nutrition rather than filler. We do not slip leftover beans or hull fragments into the process — it would get caught on the production floor long before reaching a bag.
Recently, a group of dairy nutritionists visited our mill. They cross-checked our data with their in-house analysis and found no discrepancy beyond the standard lab error. Their confidence tells us the path we follow is dependable, and we keep this trust by refusing to alter batches for the sake of volume.
Margins in agriculture have gotten thinner, not wider, and volatile commodity prices make some meals unreliable as a main feed protein. Our process discipline gives us traceability and regularity. We use a closed-loop feedback between milling, packaging, and QA labs so issues get spotted before trucks leave the plant. Sometimes we hold back shipments for an extra review, especially if the weather shifts or storage conditions look even slightly off.
Meal batches stay segregated by harvest date and bean lot, which keeps cross-contamination out of the picture. It takes effort, but the benefit appears in every batch: farm clients tell us the protein breakout is remarkably stable, even over months. That means consistent animal performance, less need for reformulation, and lower stress in the procurement office.
Commitment to process is only part of the story. Feedback runs in both directions. Some of our oldest customers have made Panda Bean Meal their main protein input for over ten years. A poultry farm in the southeast frequently shares production stats with us. Since switching from a blended meal, their flocks maintain a steadier feed-to-egg ratio, and shell quality has improved, reducing rejections at grading. They attribute part of this to Panda Bean Meal’s reliable calcium and phosphorus ratio, but mostly, it’s the absence of unknowns in the mix.
Even in export markets, the distinctive light caramel color and gentle aroma of Panda Bean Meal help it stand apart in the feed mill. Pallet after pallet moves on reputation, built not by advertising, but by years of uninterrupted supply and straightforward consistency. New clients often convert after trialing just a few bags against their previous sources, especially when dry seasons hit and meal consistency elsewhere begins to drift.
Anyone walking our floors or riding the combine can vouch for our approach: transparency comes standard. We depend on a small circle of local growers, most with decades-long relationships. No lowest-bidder contracts, no surprise inclusions. In heavy rainfall years, we’ve walked fields ourselves, pulled samples, and rejected beans with mildew or sprouting. This kind of vigilance prevents surprises at bagging and ensures our meal doesn’t carry toxins, off-colors, or inert debris downstream to the customer.
Our commitment doesn’t end with shipping; after-sales follow-through is routine. Staff from our plant check in with clients through the feeding season. When a regional drought forced some clients to rely solely on Panda Bean Meal, our logistics team coordinated to keep trucks rolling, and agronomists provided mixing advice on ration balance. We do not see ourselves as just manufacturers but as partners tuned to the production cycle, season after season.
Feed safety and compliance present genuine risks in our industry, especially with some market participants using shortcuts or questionable material. Panda Bean Meal batches undergo testing for pesticides, mycotoxins, and heavy metals on a rolling schedule. In nearly a decade, no batch has failed a compliance check. Cross-inspections by third-party auditors have found our data and retention protocols sound, as they build off traceability wired deep into our process. While regulations never rest, neither does our internal vigilance. Regular updates to compliance protocols ensure Panda Bean Meal always meets — and more often surpasses — current feed safety laws.
Behind every truck of Panda Bean Meal is a bigger picture: land stewardship and soil health. Some protein meals deplete ground fertility or are sourced from monoculture fields that exhaust local ecosystems. Our philosophy keeps rotations tight and soil organic matter on the rise. Each plot gets rotated back into cover crops and the next season’s legume patch, reducing fertilizer use. This approach cuts long-term costs for growers and maintains soil health for decades to come. In turn, the bean meal reflects that health. Clients often remark on the brighter color and lower ash compared to bulk meals, and we tie this directly to careful soil management.
Feed trends shift fast. Nutritional science discovers something new, or price swings hit soy, canola, or fish meal. Panda Bean Meal’s underlying strength lies in its simplicity and reliability. Nutritionists know exactly what the input brings to the ration, and if adjustments are needed — say, for a high-energy finishing diet — the meal slots easily alongside grains without risk of anti-nutritional surges.
Feed plants struggle with some meals that show big compositional swings by the truckload, causing batch-to-batch recalculations. For us, careful process separation and unambiguous raw material sources keep values tight. We can guarantee an amino acid spread free from “surprise” spikes in trypsin inhibitors or excess fiber that sometimes plague generic bean meals.
From each harvest and every client visit, we take away lessons. In early years, we thought maximizing tonnage would win. Experience taught otherwise: the cost of rejected loads, feed refusals, and animal hesitancy ran higher than the profit from any shortcut. We invested in testing, slowed our plant speed, added hands-on checkpoints, and established a direct rapport with the people actually feeding livestock every day.
The result is a meal that doesn’t just fit in a formula, but one that gets trust, bin after bin and season after season. We stand by Panda Bean Meal PBM-88 as a product grown, milled, and packaged with respect for everyone in the value chain — from the field hand to the nutritionist to the animal that eats it. The journey to this point contains some hard lessons and plenty of listening. Every adjustment we make starts with what comes from the soil and what returns to it.
People want to know — does Panda Bean Meal work with other protein sources? Experience says yes. Some of our longest customers run split protein rations, alternating bean meal with canola or fish protein to diversify animal amino acid intake. The consistent profile of our meal supports seamless blending, letting producers tweak rations by percentage rather than whole-scale reformulation.
Another question often comes up: how does storage fare through winter or humid periods? Our packaging team uses triple-sealed, moisture-barrier bags. Couple this with the natural oil balance of the meal and the result is improved caking resistance and shelf-life stability. As always, common sense storage — cool, dry, away from sunlight — helps maintain quality even over months.
Sustainability also remains top of mind for many. Our in-house process control and field management mean every lot of Panda Bean Meal carries a documented history. Land use management is audited independently every two years. Beans grown for this meal draw from rotating fields that meet local conservation benchmarks — a practice we will not change.
Making Panda Bean Meal in our own plant from direct-harvest beans stands as our answer to a commodity world plagued by inconsistency and shortcuts. We keep our process open to scrutiny, draw on feedback from boots in the field, and believe that consistency and quality cannot be faked — not by process gimmicks or fleeting marketing. Our commitment is to offer a meal that works for those who feed it, season after season. Panda Bean Meal PBM-88 reflects not just a product, but a working relationship with every processor, farmer, and animal that depends on us.