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  2. Ear (botany) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ear_(botany)

    Three unripe ears (of barley, wheat, and rye): each has many awns (bristles) An ear is the grain-bearing tip part of the stem of a cereal plant, such as wheat or maize (corn). [1] It can also refer to "a prominent lobe in some leaves." [2] The ear is a spike, consisting of a central stem on which tightly packed rows of flowers grow.

  3. Corncob - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corncob

    A cross-section of an ear of corn, showing the cob. A corncob, also called corn cob or cob of corn, is the hard core of an ear of maize, bearing the kernels, made up of the chaff, woody ring, and pith. Corncobs contain mainly cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. [1]

  4. Maize - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maize

    Whole ears of maize were often stored in corn cribs, sufficient for some livestock feeding uses. Today corn cribs with whole ears, and corn binders, are less common because most modern farms harvest the grain from the field with a combine harvester and store it in bins. The combine with a corn head (with points and snap rolls instead of a reel ...

  5. Sweet corn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_corn

    The fruit of the sweet corn plant is the corn kernel, a type of fruit called a caryopsis. The ear is a collection of kernels on the cob. Because corn is a monocot, there is always an even number of rows of kernels. [further explanation needed] The ear is covered by tightly wrapped leaves called the husk.

  6. How Long You Should Really Boil Corn on the Cob for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/long-really-boil-corn-cob-184046951.html

    Pull the corn ears from the pot with kitchen tongs after five minutes and cover with aluminum to keep warm until ready to serve. Corn on the cob is one of the greatest food pleasures of summer dining.

  7. Corn silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_silk

    Up to 1000 ovules (potential kernels) form per ear of corn, each of which produces a strand of corn silk from its tip that eventually emerges from the end of the ear. The emergence of at least one strand of silk from a given ear of corn is defined as growth stage R1, and the emergence of silk in 50% of the plants in a corn field is called "mid-silk".

  8. Shorter days mean the fragrant dracaena, or corn plant, may ...

    www.aol.com/shorter-days-mean-fragrant-dracaena...

    An unmaintained corn plant will accumulate brown leaves that hang down like the dead fronds of a feral palm tree. Rare perk to climate change: Breadfruit trees were thought to grow only in the ...

  9. Farm's excess ears provide fresh corn for Westmoreland Food ...

    www.aol.com/news/farms-excess-ears-fresh-corn...

    Aug. 26—Ideal growing conditions this summer left John and Sam Greenawalt up to their ears in excess sweet corn on their Sewickley Township farm. That overabundance now is a windfall for the ...