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Bran |
Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
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bran, outer coat of a cereal grain—e.g., wheat, rye, and corn—mechanically removed from commercial flour and meal by bolting or sifting. Wheat bran is extensively used as feed for farm animals. Bran is used as food for humans (in cereals or mixed with flour in bread) to add roughage (i.e., cellulose) to the diet. It is also used in dyeing and calico printing. branEdible broken seed coat, or protective outer layer, of wheat, rye, or other cereal grain, separated from the kernel. In flour processing, it is normally removed from the ground kernels by sifting them in a rotating, meshed, cylindrical frame; whole-grain flours retain the bran. Wheat bran, the most widely processed, contains 16% protein, 11% natural fibre, and 50% carbohydrate. Most bran is coarsely ground for stock feed. In a more refined form, it is used in breakfast cereal, breads, and muffins for its value to the human digestive system as roughage. Bran god whose cauldron restored dead to life. [Welsh Myth.: Jobes, 241] See : Death Bran god whose cauldron restored the dead to life. [Welsh Myth.: Jobes, 241] See : Resurrection |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Look on the label for ingredients like oat, wheat or rice bran, dried fruits and guar gum if fiber is a concern. The scientists supplemented the animals' food with powdered rice bran. Rice bran is a byproduct of milling, but goes rancid quickly because of its fat content. |
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