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cereal
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cereal

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Millet has been used as a cereal since ancient times. It is an important cereal in the tropics and warm temperate regions because it tolerates drought, growing well even in poor soil.
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Stooked corn. Stooking is the traditional method for stacking harvested corn. First, the corn is hand-husked, then cut with a scythe. Next it is tied into sheaves, or bundles, and finally stooked. Stooking means the stacking or leaning of a group of six sheaves against another six.

Grass grown for its edible, nutrient-rich, starchy seeds. The term refers primarily to wheat, oats, rye, and barley, but may also refer to maize (corn), millet, and rice. Cereals contain about 75% complex carbohydrates and 10% protein, plus fats and fibre (roughage). They store well. If all the world's cereal crop were consumed as whole-grain products directly by humans, everyone could obtain adequate protein and carbohydrate; however, a large proportion of cereal production in affluent nations is used as animal feed to boost the production of meat, dairy products, and eggs.

The term also refers to breakfast foods prepared from the seeds of cereal crops. Some cereals require cooking (porridge oats), but most are ready to eat. Mass-marketed cereals include refined and sweetened varieties as well as whole cereals such as muesli. Whole cereals are more nutritious and provide more fibre than the refined cereals, which often have vitamins and flavourings added to replace those lost in the refining process.

From 1995 to 2005, world cereal production and utilization have both increased from under 1.8 billion tonnes to over 2 billion tonnes. In 2005, global cereal stocks stood at 444 million tonnes, or 22% of the annual utilization.



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