List of Five grains in world culture

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Rice grains showing diversity
Bi'ur Chametz, burning to remove five Chametzgrains during an annual Jewish festival period

Five grains, traditional set phrase for lists or groupings which may contain non-grain crops.[1] Particular instances of Five grains of a single crop or other substance such as minerals and metals have historical or cultural significance as well.[2]

Five grains may refer to:

East Asia[]

  • Five Cereals (China), various lists of the most important cultivated crops assigned since the earliest mythological times in Chinese cuisine, farming, and civil and spiritual culture[1]
  • Baijiu liquor, whose varieties include Five Grains Liquid (Wuliangye, 五 粮 液)
  • Korean cuisine (section Grains), in whose myths deities brought seeds of five grains
  • Ogokbap, five-grains rice in Korean cuisine
  • A group of crops in Japanese cuisine and spiritual culture whose guardian is , a spirit to whom Kasama Inari Shrine is dedicated, and which are honored with a in Manyo Botanical Garden, Nara

West Asia[]

Europe[]

Atlantic[]

  • "Five grains of corn," the daily ration of starving settlers from Europe traveling by ship in search of New World settlement, a tradition of Christian Thanksgiving lore [3]

Mesoamerica[]

  • In the Mayan board game Bul, if 5 tossed corn kernels marked on one side came up blank, the count was 5[4]
  • In the Mexica Aztec board game Patolli, 5 dimpled beans or stones were used like dice[4]

Chemistry[]

  • Using Grain (unit), a 325mb tablet of aspirin is sometimes referred to as "five grain aspirin."
  • "Five grains of gold" are used in such European formulae as that for the gilding of buttons, where they are used in an amalgam of mercury[5]
  • The chemical specification of Coyoteite, NaFe3S5·2H2O, which was performed by of five grains of this mineral

References[]

  1. ^ a b Sarah Milledge Nelson, Origins of Food Production In China - Rice, Millet Cultivation, Other , , Oryza sativa, Children of the Yellow Earth, mian. With bibliography. http://www.jrank.org/history/pages/5913/Origins-Food-Production-In-China.html
  2. ^ Erd, Richard C.; Czamanske, Gerald K. (1983). "Orickite and coyoteite, two new sulfide minerals from Coyote Peak, HunboldtCountry, California". American Mineralogist 68: 245–254, [1]
  3. ^ Adoro Te Devote
  4. ^ a b "Mayan Games".
  5. ^ The Family magazine, or, Monthly abstract of general knowledge, Volume 2, 1837 CE, p. 413
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