enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Buffalo meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo_meat

    Buffalo meat is known by various names in different countries. In some places it is known as red beef, or buff in India [1] and Nepal; in other countries, it is known as carabeef, a portmanteau of "carabao" and "beef", originally coined in Philippine English in the 1970s to distinguish the meat of water buffaloes.

  3. Carabao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carabao

    Carabao milk is richer and creamier in texture than cow or goat milk, due to its much higher fat and protein content. It has similar mineral content as cow milk, except it has twice as much phosphorus. It is characteristically bluish-white in color. Carabao milk is typically home-pasteurized via a double boiler. [28]

  4. Working animal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Working_animal

    Oxen are slow but strong, and have been used in a yoke since ancient times: the earliest surviving vehicle, Puabi's Sumerian sledge, was ox-drawn; an acre was originally defined as the area a span of oxen could plow in a day. The domestic water buffalo and carabao, pull wagons and ploughs in Southeast Asia and the Philippines.

  5. Water buffalo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_buffalo

    In 2004, Philippine Carabao Center (PCC) in Nueva Ecija produced the first swamp-type water buffalo born from an in vitro-produced, vitrified embryo. It was named "Glory" after President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. Joseph Estrada's most successful project as an opposition senator, the PCC was created through Republic Act 3707, the Carabao Act of ...

  6. Ox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ox

    An ox (pl.: oxen), also known as a bullock (in British, Australian, and Indian English), [1] is a large bovine, trained and used as a draft animal. Oxen are commonly castrated adult male cattle, because castration inhibits testosterone and aggression, which makes the males docile and safer to work with.

  7. Offal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offal

    A variety of pâtés (containing liver) on a platter Animal heads, brains, trotters, and tripe on sale in an Istanbul meat market. Offal (/ ˈ ɒ f əl, ˈ ɔː f əl /), also called variety meats, pluck or organ meats, is the internal organs of a butchered animal.

  8. Hoof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoof

    The weight of the animal is normally borne by both the sole and the edge of the hoof wall. Hooves perform many functions, including supporting the weight of the animal, dissipating the energy impact as the hooves strike the ground or surface, protecting the tissues and bone within the hoof capsule, and providing traction for the animal.

  9. Nilgai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nilgai

    The generic name Boselaphus comes from the combination of the Latin bos ("cow" or "ox") and the Greek elaphos ("deer"). [12] The specific name tragocamelus comes from the join of the two Greek words tragos ("he-goat") and kamelos ("camel"). The binomial combination was first used by English zoologist Philip Sclater in 1883. [2]