[
UK
/bˈæɡæs/
]
NOUN
- the dry dusty pulp that remains after juice is extracted from sugar cane or similar plants
How To Use bagasse In A Sentence
- For experiments to make and test guayule-composite particleboard, Nakayama sent air-dried guayule bagasse to colleague at Madison, Wisconsin.
- Bagasse is oilproof (neither butter nor olive oil nor down-home pork drippings will make to soggy) and microwavable. NashvilleScene.com
- The cane stalks are slowly introduced into the processing plant to squeeze out the sugar, leaving behind a brown, straw-like residue called bagasse.
- A first step was to find an economic use for the pomace and for bagasse, the by-product of the sugar industry.
- Indias sugar industry, for instance, generates 3,500 megawatts of bagasse-based cogenerated power. Chapter 9
- It'll generate enough electricity to power 7,000 homes, by processing bagasse, the fibrous matter left over from cane crushing.
- Unlike conventional ethanol, bioethanol is made not from grain, but from cellulosic biomass, such as wheat straw, sugar cane bagasse, and corn stovers and stalks left over after harvesting.
- What's left over, the dry remnants of the cane minus its sugar content, is called bagasse. THE THORN BIRDS
- Kimberly-Clark also uses bagasse in paper towels and tissues.
- By-products include stillage for fertilizer, electricity from bagasse in the case of sugarcane, and carbon dioxide and animal feeds from corn. Chapter 7