COTTON
SEED
Cottonseed mills, in the late 1800's, used manual
powered mechanical pressure to squeeze
the oil from the seed. This was very labor
intensive and at best recovered only one-half
the oil contained in the seed. Today's
mills are either screw press or solvent extraction types. The
oil is removed from the meats leaving only
1-2 percent oil in the meats. With the
production of 790 lbs. of cottonseed per
bale of cotton lint, modern mills can extract
140 pounds of cottonseed oil. This essentially
doubles the oil production efficiency of
the older mills.
Cotton Trivia
| One
500-pound bale of cotton
will produce enough
oil to cook nearly
6,000 snack-size bags
of potato chips. |
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Processing
of cottonseed in modern mills involves
a number of steps. The first step
is its entry into the shaker room where, through a number of screens
and air equipment, twigs, leaves
and other trash are removed. The
cleaned seed is then sent to gin
stands, similar to those in cotton
saw gins, where the linters are removed
from the seed (delinted). |
This
linter removal process is usually done twice
and the fibers are collected and pressed into
600 pound bales. The linters of the highest
grade, referred to as first-cut
linters (longer more resilient
fibers) are used in manufacturing non-chemical
products, such as medical supplies, twine,
and candle wicks. The second-cut linters (short
fibers or fuzz), removed in further delinting
steps, are incorporated in chemical products,
found in various foods, toiletries, film, and
paper.
The
delinted seeds now go to the huller. The huller removes the tough seed coat with a series
of knives and shakers. The knives cut
the hulls (tough
outer shell of the seed) to loosen them
from the kernels (the inside meat of the seed, rich
in oil) and shakers separate the hulls
and kernels. The kernels are now ready
for oil extraction and the hulls are sent
to storage to be sold for livestock feed. Some
industrial uses for hulls have been developed
and are being tested. A plastic containing
hulls as a major ingredient has been used
in producing small parts for textile machinery. Hulls
are often incorporated in the mud used
in oil well drilling. They are also used
in the production of synthetic rubber and
in petroleum refining.
The meats (kernels) are now prepared for oil extraction. They
pass through flaking rollers made
of heavy cast iron, spinning at high speeds. This
presses the meats into thin flakes. These
flakes then travel to a cooker where they are cooked at 170 degrees
F to reduce their moisture levels. In screw press mills, the
kernels flow directly into a press which
has a screw or worm gear revolving inside
a horizontal steel barrel. This meat grinder
type action exposes the flakes to extremely
high pressure, 10 to 12 tons per square
inch, forcing 96% of the oil from the meats. In
the solvent extraction mills, the cooked meats are flaked
to about the thickness of paper and exposed
to live steam and high pressure. This
action ruptures the oil cells making the
oil accessible for the solvent extraction
process.
The
prepared meats are conveyed to the extractor and
washed with hexane (organic
solvent that dissolves out the oil) removing
up to 98% of the oil. This hexane-oil
mixture is called miscella. The
miscella is pumped out of the extractor
and is distilled by boiling the hexane
from the mixture and condensing it with
cooling water. The hexane is reused over
and over again. The crude cottonseed
oil is then ready for further processing
and the de-oiled meats are subjected to
live steam for removal of residual hexane. The
meats are then dried and ground to produce
a 41% protein livestock feed, called cottonseed meal. Cottonseed
meals' major value is the high protein
it contains to build muscle, nerve, blood
and hair. A small amount of cottonseed
meal is used for fertilizer. Its organic
matter improves soil texture and reduces
watering needs.
Crude
cottonseed oil requires further processing
before it may be used for food. The first
step in this process is refining. With the scientific use of heat, sodium
hydroxide and a centrifuge (equipment
used to separate substances through spinning
action), the dark colored crude oil is
transformed into a transparent, yellow
oil. This clear oil may then be bleached
with a special bleaching clay to produce
a transparent, amber colored oil. Upon
further processing, the oil is deodorized or treated
so it will remain clear and have no unwanted
flavors.
Cottonseed
oil is used in several products. Depending
on its stage of refinement, it can be used
in snack foods, mayonnaise, margarine,
baking or frying oils, explosives, cosmetics,
rubber, soap, insecticides and many other
products. Foodstuff cottonseed oil has
superior nutritive qualities and is on
the American Heart Association's list of "okay
foods".
Although
fiber is the most valuable product from
a cotton field, it is important to remember
that this versatile plant also provides
many products for human and animal consumption. It
is from this perspective that cotton becomes
a food crop.
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PhytoGen Cottonseed gives you the freedom to choose varieties that are proven to pay off in the field and at the gin. All of our varieties are created from one of the industry’s most stringent research, breeding and development programs. We started in the West more than 25 years ago and have become the elite choice in Pima and Acala cotton. And now, for more than a decade, we’ve been introducing these elite characteristics into upland varieties bred specifically for the South. So wherever you grow cotton, you can count on PhytoGen™ brand cottonseed varieties for the best in yield and quality.
™PhytoGen and the PhytoGen Logo are trademarks of PhytoGen Seed Company, LLC
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Cotton's Journey-A Field Trip SUPPLEMENT KIT

Here's the perfect item for the educator who wants to build h/her own cotton study unit. Includes the same proven curriculum book, 23-minute video, and planting seeds found in Cotton's Journey-A Field Trip in A Box complete kit (#CJ00 & #CJ01). Lessons: teach core subjects, written for grades.....
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Ordering
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