Sentences with phrase «as rice hulls»

Things such as rice hulls, beet pulp, and soybeans can create lots of excrement, meaning that your dog will poop a lot, and often.

Not exact matches

If you are concerned about this, you can use regular rice flour, made from grains which have been hulled as they tend to have a milder flavor.
The rice crop has become more sustainable over the past few years, due to 100 % crop utilization and the development of new functional ingredients from this «simple» grain: * Rice hulls — Used to replace silicon dioxide and to function as a flavor carrrice crop has become more sustainable over the past few years, due to 100 % crop utilization and the development of new functional ingredients from this «simple» grain: * Rice hulls — Used to replace silicon dioxide and to function as a flavor carrRice hulls — Used to replace silicon dioxide and to function as a flavor carrier.
Development of value - added food products from rice hulls, including products (such as ground beef and catfish patties) utilizing antioxidants from rice hulls to reduce lipid oxidation.
«So instead of taking corn and extracting its sugars to make ethanol, we're making use of the stalks and cobs left over after the corn is harvested, as well as other kinds of waste like wood chips and rice hulls
Since the hull and bran of white rice are removed, any iron, zinc, magnesium and other nutrients have been taken as well.
Roger, Brown rice contains nearly twice the levels of arsenic as white rice because much of the arsenic is found in the hull which is is polished off before becoming white rice.
Brown rice, often referred to as whole rice or cargo rice, is the whole grain with only its inedible outer hull removed.
barley, red rice, job's tears, purple millet, pancharatna dal (5 legume mix of split mung, black gram, «lentils hulled» (possibly toor), pigeon pea, chickpea), extra mung, adzuki, burdock, beets, purple potato, [one of the high calcium green leafys that has been a bit hard for me to find but hopefully becomes more available as with others], dandelion, bitter melon, mint, dill, coriander, rosemary, hibiscus, italian seasoning, garlic, ginger, purple onion, tomato, asafoetida, curry powder (coriander, fennel, cumin, mustard, turmeric, dill, rampe -LSB-?]
As a seed, rice does employ a number of anti-consumption deterrents, most of which are located in the hull and bran.
Whole Dog Journal advises consumers to stay away from lower quality rice substitutes, often used as filler in commercial dog foods, such as beet pulp, oat bran, pea fiber, soybean hulls and wheat.
While grain free foods are all the rage, as long as your dog does well on grains and has no food allergy symptoms (sloppy stools, upset stomach, itching, frequent ear issues etc), foods containing whole grains and not grain fragments (brewers rice or oat hulls for instance) are the healthier choice.
Watch out for grain fragments such as Brewers Rice, Peanut Hulls, Rice Hulls and Oat Hulls, These are the byproduct left over after human food processing.
Foods must not contain cheap filler ingredients such as brewer's rice, peanut hulls, soybean mill, wheat middlings, corn bran, etc. that are waste products of the human food industry and provide little or no nutritional value.
Wheat Flour, Ground Whole Wheat, Rice Hulls, Poultry By - Product Meal, Dried Beet Pulp, Dried Poultry Digest, Milk, Calcium Carbonate, Dicalcium Phosphate, Salt, Beef Fat (Preserved with BHA / BHT), Sodium Metabisulfite (used as a preservative), Glucosamine Hydrochloride, Vitamins (Vitamin E Supplement, Niacin Supplement, Vitamin A Supplement, D - Calcium Pantothenate, Riboflavin Supplement, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Vitamin D3 Supplement, Folic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin B12 Supplement), Minerals (Ferrous Sulfate, Zinc Oxide, Manganous Oxide, Copper Sulfate, Calcium Iodate, Sodium Selenite), Chondroitin Sulfate, BHA (used as a preservative)
Advanced biofuels can be derived from lignocellulosic feedstocks, such as agricultural waste (e.g., corn stover, wheat straw, rice hulls), agricultural processing byproducts (e.g., corn fiber or sugar cane bagasse), forestry and wood processing waste, the paper portion of municipal solid waste, or dedicated energy crops such as switchgrass.
In the U.S., research is being conducted to use hulled or whole hemp seeds in the production of «hemp milk» as an alternative to soy or rice based non-dairy milks, a category that is now the largest selling in the natural foods business.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z