Grain
Grain is the small, dry seed of cereal crops harvested for food, feed, or industrial use. Most grains come from grasses in the family Poaceae, including true cereals such as wheat, rice, maize (corn), barley, oats, rye, and sorghum. Pseudocereals such as quinoa and buckwheat are closely related in culinary use but botanically distinct. A grain kernel has three main parts: the bran, a protective outer layer; the germ, the embryonic plant; and the endosperm, which stores starch. Milling and processing can remove the bran and germ to produce refined grains or preserve all parts as whole grains.
Grains are staple foods across cultures, providing carbohydrates and varying amounts of protein, fiber, and micronutrients.
Global production concentrates on a few crops and major producing regions. Large producers include countries in
Grain can also refer to a unit of mass used in some measurement systems, defined as 1/7000