Yes, chocolate chip cookies are a grain product. They are made with flour which is ground from wheat which is a type of grain.
One piece of sugar is a grain, which is also the same for salt. E.g., a grain of sugar or a grain of salt.
what is an example of carbohydrates
Yes. Theobromine doesn't affect cattle like it affects horses, dogs, cats and rodents, but chocolate is still high in carbohydrates and starch which would affect the animal just like feeding it too much grain would. So moderation should be practiced when feeding cattle chocolate, just like feeding grain.
That is most commonly wheat, but can also be possibly made of barley or grains like quinoa.
apples, whole grain, nuts, lean meat, salmon, leafy greens, dry beans, water, dark chocolate, frequent meals...
This is hard to estimate without knowing the quantity (by weight) of cocoa. Chocolate Chips are listed second on the ingredient list, after chicory root extract and before whoel grain oats. If we assume that the bar is 1/4 chocolate (10g), and that Dark Chocolate has about 1mg of caffeine per gram, then the bar has at most 10mg of caffeine. The actual number must be less, since the chocolate is not 100% dark.
Timber is stronger across the grain than along the grain.
snickers, snickers charged, snickers almond, snickers marathon energy (chewy chocolate peanut), and snickers marathon energy (Multi grain crunch). There are also snickers dark bars,
wood grain, as at the end of a board, resulting from a cut across the grain.
Rice as a whole grain is a natural grain.
Beef against the grain.