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hulzen

Hulzen is a Dutch noun meaning shells, hulls, or husks. In Dutch-language science and agriculture, hulzen denotes the outer covering of seeds, fruits, or cereals, and more generally any protective outer casing. The term is used for both the natural husk surrounding a seed and the external shell encountered in processed products. Hulzen can refer to plant-derived coverings as well as manufactured casings.

Hulzen derives from the Dutch word huls, related to German Hülse and English hull, all sharing the

In cereal production, hulzen are the husks that must often be removed during milling or processing. The

Examples include barley, oats, and wheat hulls; rice husks are discussed in rice processing; in horticulture,

Related terms include husk, hull (botany), dehulling, and pericarp. Hulzen is primarily encountered in Dutch-language contexts,

sense
of
an
outer
covering
or
shell.
removal,
dehulling,
yields
edible
kernels
and
produces
byproducts
such
as
hulls
that
can
be
used
as
animal
feed
or
fiber.
outer
shells
of
various
fruits
and
seeds
may
be
referred
to
as
hulzen
in
Dutch
texts.
but
can
appear
in
multilingual
or
technical
discussions
of
seed
processing,
milling,
and
agriculture
when
Dutch
terminology
is
used
or
translated.