all dried grass is called hay. it is where you dry fresh cut grass make it into hay.
You would need about a quarter of dried lemon grass by weight compared to fresh lemon grass. The problem is that dried lemon grass tends to be woody, and cannot be added whole to a recipe as you would with fresh lemon grass. The only way to get decent results is to make an extract (a very strong tea) with the dried lemon grass and use as seasoning just before serving.
The answer is straw. ( :
Hay.
dried grass used for food for animals = hay The homophone is highlighted in the sentence below: Hey! That's not your car!
Hay (dried grass)
is called hay
Hay is dried Alfalfa and not the grass you grow in your yard.
Way before the settlers came to Ga. Hay is just dried grass, and can be collected anywhere grass grows, provided it's cut and dried first.
Hay is plant material, generally a grass, that is cut and dried for animals.
The farmer's word for a heap of dried grass is typically called a haystack. It is a common method of storing and preserving hay for livestock feed during the winter months.
That is the correct spelling of "straw" (dried stalks of grains or grass).
Hay is dried grass, and as such is the remains of a producer.