What's the difference between pomace and pomade?

Pomace


Definition:

  • (n.) The substance of apples, or of similar fruit, crushed by grinding.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The degradatin of the starch which occurs during production depends to a great extent upon the conditions of pomace digestion.
  • (2) Forty-eight female Wistar rats initially weighing about 75 g were fed for 28 days on the same semi-synthetic diet containing: virgin olive oil, or a mixture of canbra oil (50%), refined olive-pomace oil (20%), grapeseed oil (20%) and animal fat (10%), or the same dietary mixture supplemented with either 700 ppm oleoanilides or the alleged toxic oil.
  • (3) Various economical and readily available organic and inorganic amendments were tested for their capacity to enhance the microbial process, including Citrus (orange) peel, Vitis (grape) pomace, feedlot manure, barley straw, chitin, pectin, ZnSO4, (NH4)2SO4, and an inoculum of Acremonium falciforme (an active Se methylating fungus).
  • (4) Pectin (15.2%), straw plus N (16.4%), and grape pomace (7.3%) were among the less effective amendments for the Peck sediment.
  • (5) Nutritional evaluation of dried tomato pomace (DTP-20) as a source of protein was carried out using weanling rats.
  • (6) There was an increase of about 50% in protein content of the pomace after 96 h of fermentation.
  • (7) Not to mention the sale of unbottled tsipouro – home-distilled pomace spirit – or who can legally own a pharmacy.
  • (8) Fiber sources tested included beet pulp (BP), tomato pomace (TP), peanut hulls (PH), wheat bran (WB) and alkaline hydrogen peroxide-treated wheat straw (AHPWS).
  • (9) The physico-chemical changes during the submerged fermentation of the pomace and the organoleptic qualities of the composite cake were also monitored.
  • (10) The effect of two dehydrated apple products (10% in diet)--apple pulp (crude fibre 3.5%, pectin 1.4%) and apple pomaces (crude fibre 13.5%, pectin 7%)--on the serum and liver lipids of growing Syrian male hamsters were studied.
  • (11) The use of biodegraded cashew pomace processed into flour for cake baking was investigated.
  • (12) Two experiments were conducted to determine the effects of heat, water, acid, and alkali treatment of tomato pomace on gain, feed to gain ratio, nitrogen utilization, and ME of diets for broiler chicks.
  • (13) Apple juice, dried pomace, and applesauce contained more ETU than the EBDC-treated apples, from which these products were produced.
  • (14) The second experiment was designed to test the effect of alkali concentration and treatment time of tomato pomace on the performance of broiler chicks.
  • (15) In Experiment 1, both treated and untreated tomato pomace was included in broiler diets at a 10 or 20% level.

Pomade


Definition:

  • (n.) Cider.
  • (n.) Perfumed ointment; esp., a fragrant unguent for the hair; pomatum; -- originally made from apples.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Pomade crusts have not been described previously in this localization.
  • (2) Quackery has for centuries used aphrodisiacs to exploit vulnerable victims, 30% of whom, through the power of suggestion, have achieved sexual success from potions, powders and genital pomades.
  • (3) Photograph: Rex Warm-up the falsetto, crack the lid on the pomade, Clint Eastwood's musical about the Four Seasons is set to be as slick as they come.
  • (4) In addition, acne veneate (pomade acne, Vaselinoderma), which is characterized by noninflammatory acneiform lesions, is very common in black persons.
  • (5) Double blind study with contralateral comparison, between diflucortolon valerianat, 0.1% and the flumetason pivalat, 0.02% in pomades (ointments).
  • (6) Exaggerated use of skin care topicals in infants may lead to brownish appositions in the inguinal and gluteal region described as pomade crust.
  • (7) A 63-year-old woman with a history of exaggerated use of topical skin care products of post-traumatic scarring alopecia presented with a monstrous cutaneous horn-like pomade crust of the scalp hidden beneath a wig.
  • (8) Seven infants aged 6 days to 9 months were tested for the use by rubbing of a pomade containing 1 mg trinitrine.

Words possibly related to "pomace"

Words possibly related to "pomade"