Wheat Bran
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Wheat Bran
© Denzil Green
BranBran is the portion of the grain immediately under the husk of the wheat kernel; it covers the entire kernel. Mostly, people add Wheat Bran to recipes that use flour to add nutritional punch in making items such as pancakes, muffins, and breads. A few tablespoons at a time should do it, but you can substitute up to 1/3 of the flour for Wheat Bran in many recipes.
While there are other types of bran such as oat bran, if a recipe doesn't specify, it means "wheat" bran.
Store in the refrigerator or freezer to keep it from going rancid.
See Also: Oat Bran
Other entries for: Wheat
Bulgur Wheat, Cracked Wheat, Durum Wheat, Emmer, Hard Wheat, Soft Wheat, Spring Wheat, Wheat Berries, Wheat Bran, Wheat Flakes, Wheat Germ, Winter Wheat
Other entries for: Grains
Amaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Cereals, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Quinoa, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale
- O–Toro
- OAC Ruby Gold Potatoes
- Oak Lettuce
- Oak Root Fungus
- Oat Bran
- Oat Flakes
- Oat Flour
- Oat Groats
- Oat Milk
- Oat Sprout Milk
- Oat Sprouts
- Oatmeal -- Brose
- Oats
- Oats -- Instant
- Oats -- Quick
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- Oats -- Steel-Cut
- Oats --Groats
- Oaxaca Cheese
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- Oca
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- Oceanic Bonito
- Ochlockonee Blueberries
- Ochro
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- Oden
- Odika
- Odori Ebi



