Cereal in general
Cereals are monocotyledonous plants that belong to the grass family. Based on botanists’ approximation, there are about 350,000 plant species, of which about 195,000 species are economically important flowering plants.
Nearly 50 species are cultivated worldwide and as few as 17 species provide 90% of human food supply and occupy about 75% of the total tilled land on earth.
They consist of wheat, rice, corn, potato, barley, sweet potato, cassava, soybean, oat, sorghum, millet, rye, peanut, field bean, pea, banana and coconut.
The cereal grains such as wheat, rice, corn, barley, oat, rye, sorghum and millet provide 50% of the food energy and 50% of the protein consumed on earth.
Wheat, rice and corn together make up three-fourths of the world’s grain production.
In general, cereal grain have been considered as the source of carbohydrates to supply food energy to the diet. Cereal grains, especially rice and wheat, provide the bulk of energy consumed on earth.
The cereal crops that are grown for their edible fruit are generally called grain, but botanically referred to as caryopsis. The cereal seed consist of two major components, the endosperm and embryo or germ.
The endosperm encompass the bulk of the seed and is the energy source of stored food.
An outer wall called the pericarp that develops from the ovary wall encases the endosperm. A semi-permeable layer under the epicarp, which is called testa, surrounds the embryo and is derived from the inner ovary wall.
The testa is permeable to water but not to dissolved salts an is important for germination. The third layer, which is called aleurone, contains thick walled cells that are free of starch. The pericarp, testa and aleurone layer are collectively called the bran.
Cereal in general
Evolution of Milk Powder: From Early Innovations to Global Significance
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The history of milk powder processing begins in the early 19th century,
driven by the need for a stable, long-lasting form of milk. In 1802,
Russian chemis...