Political Science, asked by ojhapriyanka241, 1 year ago

8 lines on the importance of cereal in our daily life

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Answered by sai150
54
The Importance of Cereals in Human Nutrition
In almost every country and region, cereals provide the staple food. In the world as a whole, only 5% of starchy staple food comes from root crops (mainly cassava, potato, and yams, depending on climate), whereas the rest is from cereal. There is a greater dependence in roots in the developing economies, where the average figure for roots is 10%.

Cereal grains contain 60% to 70% starch and are excellent energy rich foods for humans. Doctors recommend cereals as the first food to be added to infant diets and evidence from research upholds that healthy diet for adults should have most of its calories in the form of complex carbohydrate such as cereal starch. Even in countries, such as United Kingdom, where there is a wide choice of different foods available, people gets a large amount of their dietary energy (20% - 30%) from cereals or foods containing cereal starch.

A healthy human diet must also include 20 to 30 g/day of dietary fiber, which can easily achieved by eating whole grain cereal products such as breads, cookies or porridges.

Adult woman requires about 50 g of protein per day, whereas an adult man needs slightly more (about 63g). The cereals can easily supply this quantity of protein, but unfortunately they lack the essential amino acid lysine and therefore they must not be used as the sole source of dietary protein. In rural areas of poorer countries people may eat more than 500 g of cereal per day, which will provide most of their protein needs (and more than 50% of their total daily energy requirement).
Answered by anvitanvar032
1

Answer:

The correct answer to this question is  dietary protein, iron, vitamin B complex, vitamin E, carbs, niacin, riboflavin, thiamine, and fiber

Explanation:

Given - cereal in our daily life

To Find - The importance of cereal in our daily life.

Cereals are a vital source of dietary protein, iron, vitamin B complex, vitamin E, carbs, niacin, riboflavin, thiamine, and fiber, as well as traces of minerals that are essential for both humans and other animals.

Any grass that is grown for its edible grain, which is made up of the endosperm, germ, and bran (technically, a sort of fruit called a caryopsis).

The name Ceres, a Roman goddess of agriculture and harvest, is where the word cereal first appeared. Although maize is now exclusively referred to as corn in the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, grains are still often referred to as corn in the United Kingdom.

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