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Press cake

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sesame press cake
Oil cakes
Cocoa cake

A press cake or oil cake is the solid matter remaining after pressing something to extract the liquids. Their most common use is in animal feed.

Some foods whose processing creates press cakes are olives for olive oil (pomace), peanuts for peanut oil, coconut flesh for coconut cream and milk (sapal), grapes for wine (pomace), apples for cider (pomace), mustard cake, and soybeans for soy milk (used to make tofu) (this is called soy pulp) or oil. Other common press cakes come from flax seed (linseed), cottonseed, and sunflower seeds. However, some specific kinds may be toxic, and are rather used as fertilizer; for example, cottonseed contains a toxic pigment, gossypol, that must be removed before processing.[1]

Household use

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In Nepalese cuisine the oil cake of the Persian walnut is used for culinary purposes, and it is also applied to the forehead to treat headaches.[2] In some regions it is used as boiler fuel as a means of reducing energy costs, for which it is quite suitable.[3]

Military use

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In 1942 the Porton Down biology department outsourced the production of 5,273,400 linseed press cakes to Olympia Oil and Cake Company in Blackburn Meadows[4] which would then be infected with Bacillus anthracis (bacteria that causes Anthrax) and using in the biological warfare program Operation Vegetarian.[4]


Peanuts

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Peanut pie (or peanut bran) is a byproduct of biofuel and consumible peanut oil production.[5] It has uses in livestock feed, particularly in the diets of ruminant animals.[5][6] The Brazilian Biodiesel Program has included peanuts as a part of its raw materials supply, as the legume has a 45- to 50-percent grain oil yield. Family farmers include peanut in their cultivation, which contributes to the diversification of production and income generation.[7] After the extraction of the oil, peanut pie (also called peanut bran) has a nutritional value of 45-percent protein, approximately 8.5-percent grease, and a maximum of 9.5-percent cellulose.[7]

References

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  1. ^ The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica (3 May 2021). "Oil cake | Definition, Oilseed, & Uses". Britannica. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  2. ^ Manandhar 2002, p. 279.
  3. ^ Clay 2004, p. 268.
  4. ^ a b George, Rosie (14 October 2001). "UK planned to wipe out Germany with anthrax". Sunday Herald. Glasgow. ProQuest 331261246.
  5. ^ a b Dias et al. 2018, pp. 651–657.
  6. ^ Tavares, Paloma; Oliveira, Izamara; Turmina, Roberta; Fluck, Ana; Amanda, Renata; Fernandes, Aguilar; Macagnan, Rodrigo; Zorzi, Laura; Rafain, Eduarda (June 8, 2022). "COMPOSIÇÃO NUTRICIONAL DE SUBPRODUTOS DO BIODIESEL". Conference: Zootecnia Brasil 2018 - 55° Reunião Anual da Sociedade Brasileira de Zootecnia e 28° Congresso Brasileiro de Zootecnia (in Brazilian Portuguese).
  7. ^ a b Silva et al. 2017, pp. 653–661.

See also

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Works cited

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  • Manandhar, Narayan P. (April 1, 2002). Plants and people of Nepal. Portland (Or.): Timber press. ISBN 0-88192-527-6.
  • Clay, Jason W. (2004). World agriculture and the environment: a commodity-by-commodity guide to impacts and practices. Washington, D.C: Island Press. ISBN 1-55963-370-0.
  • Dias, Carina Anunciação Santos; Bagaldo, Adriana Regina; Cerutti, Weiler Giacomaza; Barbosa, Analívia Martins; de Carvalho, Gleidson Giordano Pinto; Costa, Emellinne Ingrid Souza; Bezerra, Leilson Rocha; Oliveira, Ronaldo Lopes (March 2018). "Peanut cake can replace soybean meal in supplements for lactating cows without affecting production". Tropical Animal Health and Production. 50 (3): 651–657. doi:10.1007/s11250-017-1482-6. PMID 29238885.
  • Silva, Enilson De Barros; Ferreira, Evander Alves; Pereira, Gustavo Antônio Mendes; Silva, Daniel Valadão; Oliveira, Altino Júnior Mendes (July–September 2017). "Peanut Plant Nutrient Absorption and Growth". Revista Caatinga. 30 (3): 653–661. doi:10.1590/1983-21252017v30n313rc. ISSN 0100-316X.