H3PO4 Ha-Ogen Melons Haas Apple Haas Apples Habak Mint Habanero Chile Peppers Hachiya Persimmons Haggis Haig Potatoes Hairy Cucumber Hairy Lychees Hairy Melon Hairy Mint Halaby Peppers Hale's Best Jumbo Cantaloupe Melons Half-Fat Double Gloucester Half-High Blueberries Half-Moon Pumpkins Half-standing Rib Roast Half Cream Half & Half Cream Halford Sauce Halibut Halibut Fluke Muscle Halkikis Olives Hall Apples Hallacas Hallo-Queen Pumpkins Halloumi Cheese Hallowe'en Pumpkins Hallowmas Bannock Hallum Apples Halvah Halved Olives Ham Previous | Next | Cereals© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedCereal plants produce many separate small dry fruits, which we call kernels or grains. The oldest Cereals are wheat, barley, rice, corn and spelt. Oats and rye are relatively recent additions: they were originally viewed as weeds growing amid crops of wheat and barley in the Middle East. But as cultivation moved north, farmers found that oats and rye actually did better in the colder northern climates. Modern wheat, rye and corn grow "naked" grains that don't have to be husked before milling; barley, oats and rice do. The germ and the bran of grains contain most of the fibre, oil and B vitamins. Wheat is unique in that it has a protein in great quantities called "gluten", which is why it has always been used for bread. Cereals are high in protein, but their protein is incomplete owing to insufficient amounts of lysine which, by lucky happenstance, legumes are high in. That is why mixing grains with beans gives a complete protein meal, even without meat, eggs or dairy.
Also called: Cereales (French); Getreide, Körner (German); Cereali (Italian); Cereales (Spanish); Preparado de cereais (Portuguese); Frumentum (Roman)
Other entries for: CerealsCereals Other entries for:GrainsAmaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Quinoa, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale, Wheat |
|

