glow foods are fruits and veges. so corn is glow food
The collective word for a group of corn is a "shock" or a "sheaf." These terms refer to a bundle of corn stalks that have been tied together after harvesting. The use of "shock" or "sheaf" dates back to traditional agricultural practices where corn was harvested by hand and bundled for storage or drying.
Actually no.. quite on the contrary if any. If the farmer grows both cow corn and sweet corn, the way we did it was the sweet corn on the outside 3 or 4 or however many rows, and the cow corn on the inside. It made it easier to pick, and you didn't ruin any cow corn when you tried to harvest it, because the outside was sweet corn which had already been picked.Additional Info.While it is very occasionally done, as both the answer above and one of the discussion points mention, it is only done in either way (outside or inside the field) on a very small portion of the field -- for the farm family's convenience. If you want high quality sweet corn, it must be planted in a location isolated from field (cow) corn, or any other type of corn, because the other corn's pollen will make the sweet corn kernels go "starchy". The best sweet corn (and what you buy in the can or frozen) is grown in a field all by itself for this reason.
Sweet corns falls under the category of carbohydrates, as does pasts, rice, potatoes, wheat, barley, oats and more.
Crackers would go in the grain food group.
A pear would go in the 'vitmins and minerals' food group because it is a fruit. All fruit are part of this food group.
It goes in the diary food group
The sweets group.
Undigestive food will either go to your appendix or it will go out the drain. If I understand your question correctly you are asking where does the undigested food go? The answer would be that the body eliminates it with digested waste products. A good example of this is corn. Corn is undigestible by the human body and is eliminated with other waste. Ah yes, Corn: nature's broom.
the milk group
let me guess in ur a$$
A grilled pork chop would go in the protein food group.