Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Groaty pudding is made from soaked groats, leeks, onions, beef, and beef stock, baked for up to 16 hours. It is a traditional meal on Guy Fawkes Night. [3] Sliced oat groats are known as steel-cut oats, pinhead oats, coarse or Irish oatmeal. Coarse barley flour is made by milling barley groats. [4]
The groats may be milled to produce fine, medium, or coarse oatmeal. [1] Rolled oats are oats that have been steamed, flattened by a "flaking roller", and dried. Old-fashioned oats are made from whole oat groats and may be thick and require longer cooking time. Quick-cooking rolled oats are made from steel-cut oats and rolled somewhat thinner.
Whole oat groats can be cooked as a breakfast cereal in the same general way as the various forms of oatmeal, rolled oats, and pinhead oats; they simply take longer to cook. [3] [5] Rolled oats are used in granola, muesli, oatcakes, and flapjacks (the style of "flapjack" that is like a granola bar, not a pancake).
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Avena nuda (hulless oat, naked oat [2]) is a species of grass with edible seeds in the oat genus Avena. When threshed , the hull separates quite readily from the grain. [ 3 ]
Groat (grain) – the hulled kernels of various cereal grains such as oat, wheat, and rye. Groats are whole grains that include the cereal germ and fiber-rich bran portion of the grain as well as the endosperm (which is the usual product of milling). Gruel – very thin porridge, often drunk.
Steel-cut oats (US), also called pinhead oats, coarse oatmeal (UK), [1] [2] or Irish oatmeal, are groats (the inner kernel with the inedible hull removed) of whole oats which have been chopped into two or three pinhead-sized pieces (hence the names; "steel-cut" comes from the steel blades). [3]
The oat (Avena sativa), sometimes called the common oat, is a species of cereal grain grown for its seed, which is known by the same name (usually in the plural). Oats appear to have been domesticated as a secondary crop, as their seeds resembled those of other cereals closely enough for them to be included by early cultivators.