Whole Grains A to Z | The Whole Grains Council wholegrainscouncil.org/whole-grains-101/whole-grains-zPrivate View Thumbnail descriptions of some of the many whole grain varieties that delight our taste buds in a wide range of dishes. Download a Printer Friendly handout of this page (170K PDF). The grains below, when consumed in a form including the bran, germ and endosperm, are examples of generally accepted whole grain foods and flours.Click here to access our full Grain of the Month Calendar, or click ...
Broken rice - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_ricePrivate View Cơm tấm (literally "broken rice") with a lemongrass pork chop, from Vietnam. A thieboudienne from Mauritania, with tomato broken rice, fish, and vegetables. Due to the different size and shape of the grains, broken rice has a different, softer texture from "unbroken" rice, [7] [8] and absorbs flavours more easily. [citation needed]
gritty - English-French Dictionary WordReference.com www.wordreference.com/enfr/grittyPrivate View rêche, abrasif, abrasive adj. (fruits, texture) granuleux, granuleuse adj. (yeux) irrité adj. The gritty sandpaper worked well to remove the old paint from the wood. Le papier de verre abrasif marchait bien pour enlever la vieille peinture du bois. gritty adj. figurative, informal (drama: tough)
WaniKani / Radical / Grain www.wanikani.com/radicals/grainPrivate View Grain. Mnemonic. This is a tree with a slide cutting off the top. What do you cut off the top of trees and plants? The grain s. Imagine taking a sickle and slicing the grains off rice or wheat. The plant you leave behind will look like this radical. It's a sign that you got a grain of some sort from it.
veiller au grain - Wiktionary, the free dictionary en.wiktionary.org/wiki/veiller_au_grainPrivate View French [edit] Etymology [edit]. Expression arises from maritime use: grain is a sudden, violent gust of wind, accompanied with or without rain; veiller au grain means to watch for, or be on guard for, unpredictable meteorological events that can endanger an ill-prepared crew or damage a frail, poorly sheltered boat. Pronunciation [edit]. IPA (): /vɛ.je o ɡʁɛ̃/, /ve.je o ɡʁɛ̃/, (more ...
grain - Étymologie, Origine & Signification | etymonline www.etymonline.com/fr/word/grainPrivate View Également ingrain, à la fin du 14ème siècle, à l'origine "teindre (un tissu) en rouge avec de la cochenille", de la phrase française en graine, de graine "graine d'une plante", également "cochenille" (la source de la teinture était supposée être des baies), donc "teinture rapide". Voir grain; comparer également kermes.
Tselina - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TselinaPrivate View Tselina or virgin lands ( Russian: целина́, lit. 'whole lands'; Ukrainian: цілина́, romanized : tsilina) is an umbrella term for underdeveloped, scarcely populated, high-fertility lands often covered with the chernozem soil. [1] The lands were mostly located in the steppes of the Volga region, Northern Kazakhstan and Southern Siberia.