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| Introduction             Cereals have been throughout
  history and are unquestionably the most important sources of plant food for
  humans and livestock   All of the
  original ancestors of cereals have been lost over the millennia that they
  have been cultivated.  The development
  of all the major cereals occurred long before recorded history for all the
  oldest civilizations were already familiar with several kinds of barley,
  wheat and other grains.  Also the
  actual origin of these cereals had been so long forgotten that they were
  given supernatural powers and played a part in the religious ceremonies of
  the various nations of antiquity (Hill 1952).             In ancient Rome they held
  festivals at seeding time and harvest in honor of the goddess of Ceres, whom
  they worshipped as the giver of grain. 
  They brought offerings of wheat and barley to these festivals, the
  “cerealia munera” or gifts of Ceres, from which the name “cereals” was
  derived.  In ancient Greece similar
  religious ceremonies were observed. 
  In America the natives of Mexico worshipped an agricultural deity to
  whom they brought the first fruits of their harvest.             All cereals are members of the
  grass family, Gramineae, and are similar in possessing the characteristic
  fruit of that family, the karyopsis. 
  In this fruit the wall of the seed is fused with the ripening ovary
  wall to form the husk.  The term
  “grain” is given either to this type of fruit or to the plant that produces
  it.  There are six true cereals in the
  world today, which are Wheat, Rye, Rice, Oats and maize.  Of these wheat, maize and rice are the most
  important, and each has played roles in the development of
  civilizations.  The millets, sorghums
  and even buckwheat are often referred to as cereals, but they belong to a
  different classification.             There are many reasons why cereals
  are such important crops.  One of more
  of these grasses is available in each of the different world climates.  The northern regions have barley and rye,
  the temperate regions wheat and the tropics and warmer temperate areas rice
  and maize.  Cereals also have a wide
  range of soil and moisture requirements. 
  They can be cultivated with a small amount of effort and give a high
  yield.  The grains are relatively easy
  to handle and store because of their low water content, and they are very
  high in food value.  Cereals contain a
  higher percentage of carbohydrates than any other food plants as well as a
  considerable amount of protein and some fats.  There are even vitamins present.  In modern times the quest for greater yields has sometimes
  sacrificed flavor, and low yielding varieties that may possess
  characteristics of quality are gradually being ignored or even lost.  This is especially noticeable in the cold
  cereal industry that produces an array of products few of which match up in
  flavor or texture to those of the earlier 20th Century.  Some high latitude areas of South America
  have managed to continue production of superior cold cereal products for
  local consumption.   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -             This is the most widely grown
  cereal of temperate regions.  Its
  native home is not definitely known because it is so ancient.  There are some indications that highlands
  in Syria and Palestine might be the place of origin, but the Central Asian
  plateau and the Tigris and Euphrates valleys might be included.  Of course Vavilov considered wheat to have
  had multiple origins, the soft wheats originating in the mountains of
  Afghanistan and the southwestern Himalayas, while the durum or hard wheats
  may be from Abyssinia, Algeria and Greece and the einkorn variety from Asia
  Minor.  Archeological evidence
  indicates that wheat had already been cultivated by earlier than 4,000 B.C.  Wheat was at the core of Babylonian
  civilization and it was cultivated by all the other Old World nations of
  antiquity.  Aristotle, Pliny and
  Theophrastus all mentioned numerous varieties of wheat.  In China it was grown by 2,700 B.C. and
  was used by the lake Dwellers of Switzerland and Hungary, civilizations that
  go back to the Stone Age.  Wheat was
  first introduced into America at Mexico in 1529.  Wheat was sowed in New England in 1602 and it reached Virginia
  by 1611, California by 1769 and Minnesota by 1845 (Hill 1952).                 Wheat is an annual grass in the
  genus Triticum that comprises a large number of wild as well as
  cultivated species.  The wild species
  are often weeds.  Cultivated wheat, Triticum
  aesticum, reaches a height of 2-4 ft. 
  The flower is a terminal spike or head consisting of 15-20 spikelets
  that are borne on a zigzag axis. 
  Individual spikelets are sessile and solitary, consisting of 1-5
  flowers each.  The mature grain
  consists of the embryo (6 %), a starchy endosperm (82-86 %), the nitrogenous
  aleurone layer (3-4 %), and the husk or bran (8-9 %).  The husk is made up of the remains of the
  nucellus, the integuments of the seed coat and the ovary walls or pericarp.               Innumerable species and varieties
  of wheat have arisen over its long period of cultivation.  This was the result of intentional or
  unintentional selection on the part of humans of forms that had some
  particularly desirable qualities. 
  Eight principal kinds of wheat were were differentiated as species by
  Hackel:  einkorn, Polish wheat, emmer,
  spelt common wheat club wheat durum wheat and poulard wheat (Hill 1952).   Modern classification has been on the
  basis of chromosome number with the most important species falling into three
  groups:  Diploid (7 pairs) = Triticum
  monococcum; Tetraploid (14 pairs) = T. dicoccum, T. durum, T.
  polonicum, T. timopheevi and T. turgidum; Hexaploid (21 pairs) = T.
  compactum, T. aesticum and T. spelta.  Various varieties of these species have
  been produced at different times.             Einkorn, emmer and spelt are the
  most primitive.  They resemble the
  wild species of Triticum with fragile jointed heads that break during
  threshing and the grain does not separate easily from its enclosing envelopes.              
  Triticum monococcum
  has
  been called “One-grained Wheat” because it has only
  one fruit in each spikelet.  It is one
  of the oldest species, dating back to the Stone Age.  It is a plant that can be grown in very poor
  soil and will therefore is useful in regions where other types cannot
  survive.  Einkorn is a small plant,
  rarely 2 ft. in height with a very low yield.  It is still cultivated to some extent in mountainous regions of
  Southern Europe, especially in Spain. 
  It is not used much for baking but primarily for animal feed.  In other places it continues to be grown
  for experimental purposes.                
  Emmer, Triticum dicoccum, is also known as “Starch
  Wheat,” “Rice
  Wheat,”
  or “Two-grained Spelt.”  It has a flattened
  head with bristles or awns.  It is
  another very old type that was grown in Babylonia and by all the early
  Mediterranean civilizations and the lake Dwellers of Europe.  It is still cultivated in the mountainous
  areas of Italy, Spain, Germany, Switzerland and Russia.  It thrives in dry soil.  After being introduced into the United
  States from Russia it was used for livestock and breakfast foods and in
  experimental breeding efforts.               Triticum spelta is another primitive
  wheat of antiquity, spelt is hardy and can be grown in the poorest
  soils.  It has been cultivated in the
  Mediterranean region for centuries and is still grown in Spain.  In North America is has been used as
  livestock feed.               Polish wheat, Triticum
  polonicum,
  or “Giant
  Rye”
  has a very characteristic appearance due to the long papery bracts
  surrounding each spikelet.  The stems
  are solid and the bluish-green ears are flattened.  The species is of comparatively recent origin.  Despite its name it did not originate in
  Poland.  It has been grown chiefly in
  Spain and Italy, Turkestan and Abyssinia. 
  The plants are large, but have a small yield of little value.  Polish wheat has not proven to be well
  adapted to North American growing conditions because it gives a low yield.           
  Also known as “English
  Wheat” or “River Wheat”, Poulard Wheat, Triticum
  turgidum,
  is an old species that probably originated in dry portions of the southern
  Mediterranean region.  The heads are large
  but the yield is small and the plant is only of importance in England.  Elsewhere it is grown only in small
  quantity.               Triticum compactum (tenax), also called “Dwarf Wheat” or “Hedgehog Wheat” is different from all
  other species in having short compact heads and small kernels.  The plants are small and have a very stiff
  and strong straw.  Club Wheat is well
  adapted to poor soil and is grown chiefly in the mountainous areas of Central
  Europe, Abyssinia and Turkestan.  It
  has been grown in Chile and in the Western United States.  The grains are soft and have low protein
  content, so the flour is not used for bread but rather for pastry flour.               Triticum durum has a thick head with
  long stiff beards and large, hard, amber or red grains that are rich in
  gluten.  This species has been
  cultivated for a long time in the arid regions of the Old World.  It is the main wheat in Spain and is also
  grown in Algeria, India and Russia. 
  Durum wheats were introduced into North America from Russia and have
  been extremely valuable.  The low
  rainfall and high temperatures typical of the Great Plains renders the region
  unsuitable for most other crops without irrigation.  These wheats are very hardy and drought tolerant.  Their high gluten content makes them
  especially suitable for macaroni, semolina and other types of pastas.  They are mixed with other flour in bread
  baking.  Red durum wheats are used for
  livestock.               Triticum vulgare is the principal source
  of bread flour.  These wheats occur in innumerable
  varieties differing in both external morphological and physiological
  characteristics.  There are bearded
  and beardless varieties, red and white varieties and hard and soft varieties.  The hard wheats are richer in proteins and
  usually have small grains; the soft wheats produce large grains that are
  richer in starch.  The physiological
  characteristics include such things as yield per acre, late or early
  maturing, resistance to drought, cold or disease; behavior in milling and
  baking, and the season that they are sown (spring or winter).  Spring wheat is sown in the spring and
  harvested in late summer.  Winter
  wheat is planted in the autumn and develops a partial root system before the onset
  of cold weather.  In the spring it has
  a vigorous early growth and can be harvested in early summer.  Winter wheat has a higher yield, is more
  resistant to disease and matures earlier.               Triticum timopheevi from Russia is especially resistant
  to disease and thus has been used in breeding programs with standard
  varieties.               Seven grades or classes of wheat
  are recognized by the United States Department of Agriculture.  The five most important are Hard Red
  Spring Wheat, Durum Wheat, Hard Red Winter Wheat, Soft Red Winter Wheat and
  White Wheat.               About 20 percent of the wheat
  grown in the United States has been Hard Red Spring Wheat.  They are grown primarily in Minnesota,
  North & South Dakota and Canada where the winters are too severe for
  winter wheat.  They are used for bread
  flour.  Marquis Wheat has been one of
  the chief varieties.              
  Amber durum wheats are all spring wheats and include at least 10
  varieties.  Kubanka is a well-known
  variety.  They make up about 6 percent
  of the wheat crop and are grown mainly in North & South Dakota and
  Minnesota.  Their use is almost
  entirely for macaroni and other pastas.               This grade of wheat is grown
  primarily in the central and southern Great Plains where hot summers and
  severe dry winters are common. 
  Kansas, Nebraska, Texas and Oklahoma lead the production, and this
  wheat makes up about 47 percent of the total crop.  Turkey is a common variety. 
  The flour is of high bread making quality.               This group constitutes about 30
  percent of the United States wheat crop. 
  It is the principal wheat grown east of the Mississippi River and is
  centered in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. 
  It is also cultivated inn the Pacific Northwest.  It is adapted to a more humid climate than
  the other wheats.  The grains are
  starchier and the flour is used for pastry, cake, breakfast foods and home
  baking.  This group also includes the
  red club wheats.              
  This group makes up about 5 percent of the United States wheat crop
  and it comprises all of the white-grained forms, whether common wheat or club
  wheat, and includes both hard and soft and spring and winter wheats.  They are grown in the Pacific Northwest
  and in the northeastern United States. 
  The flour is used for pastry and breakfast foods and is blended with
  hard-wheat flour for bread making.                
  Wheat is best adapted to moderately dry temperate climates, and is not
  grown in warm humid regions.  Climates
  with a growing season of at least 90 days and an annual rainfall of not less
  than 9 inches are essential.  Over 30
  in. of rain is detrimental.  Generally
  regions with a cool moist spring merging into warm, bright, dry harvest
  periods are the best, but the various kinds of wheat differ in their
  requirements.  Good climatic
  conditions for wheat are found in nine different areas in the world and these
  are the principal wheat-producing regions. 
  They include the plains of southern Russia and the Danube, the
  Mediterranean countries, Northwestern Europe, the central plains of the
  United States and Canada, the Columbia River basin in the Pacific Northwest,
  Norwest India, north central China, Argentina and Southeast Australia.            
  Clays and loams are the best soils for wheat although a light sandy
  soil may be used.  If the ground is
  too wet the plants lack vigor and produce a small yield.  But a porous soil does not hold sufficient
  moisture.  Lime is an essential
  element and must be added if the calcium content of the soil is low.  Nitrogen, Phosphorous and potassium are
  also required.  The best fertilizer is
  barnyard manure.            
  The land must be thoroughly cleared for wheat is easily choked out by
  weeds.  Crop rotation is generally
  practiced and wheat is planted after a crop of beets, turnips or tobacco that
  kill out weeds.  The methods of
  cultivation naturally vary depending on the kind of wheat and the character
  of the soil and climate.  The time of
  sowing depends on whether the plant is a winter or summer crop.  For a good harvest the seed must be heavy,
  well developed and fully ripe.  Only
  the finest ears are used for seed. 
  The grains are winnowed to remove dust and light grains.  They are then sifted and bolted and are
  treated with chemicals to kill any fungus spores.  Wheat may be sown broadcast, either by hand or by machine, the
  former method being confined to small farms. 
  Two kinds of machines are used on large farms.  One sows the wheat broadcast and the other
  drills furrows and buries the seed all in one operation.  Germination begins immediately and the
  first leaves appear within two weeks. 
  Inn the case of spring wheat growth continues unchecked until
  maturity, but in winter wheat it is halted with the advent of frost.  If the cold is too severe or if the roots
  are exposed, winter wheat may die. 
  Weeding is constantly required. 
  On the largest farms machines are used which plow 24 furrows at one
  time.  The various stages of the
  ripening grain are known as milk-ripe, yellow-ripe or dough, full ripe, and
  dead ripe.  Wheat is not always
  allowed to mature fully for it is then more valuable for livestock feed.  Several insect and fungus pests attack
  wheat.  The latter include bunt, smut
  and rust.  Wheat rust causes colossal
  losses, often wiping out a whole crop. 
  Many attempts have been made to import rust-resistant varieties, as
  well as drought-resistant varieties, and continuing efforts are made to
  produce them experimentally.                 Methods of harvest vary with the
  size of the farm.  Various kinds of
  simple reaping scythes, reaping hooks or machines continue to be used in
  underdeveloped areas to cut the culms and binding machines bind them into
  sheaves.  The wheat is then stored and
  must be kept dry.  Threshing is the
  next process.  This involves the
  separation of the grain from the spike. 
  This has long been done by hand, using a flail.  It is a long and tiresome process, but is
  less damaging to the grain than a threshing machine.  The wheat is laid in rows all pointing in
  the same way to a depth of 1 in. 
  These rows are then struck at regular intervals with the flail, and
  then the wheat is turned and the process repeated.  A cart that traces a spiral course over the stalks has been
  widely used in Europe.  After
  threshing the wheat is winnowed and sifted. 
  Threshing machines are frequently used.  These are either horizontal or vertical and consist of rapidly
  revolving drums of hard wood, provided with barbed beaters that struck the
  ears with a substantial force and with a frequency up to 800 r.p.m.  The most complicated harvesting machines,
  the combines, are used for large acreages. 
  They reap, clean, thresh, winnow and sift the grains, separate the
  wheat from the chaff, eliminate foreign seeds, sort into grades and bag the
  grain, leaving the bags behind and finally binding the straw.  These huge portable factories are more and
  more mechanized, but used to be drawn by horses.  They can cut a swath over 40 ft. wide.  It is possible with the aid of less than
  eight people to harvest 120 acres each day.             Storage must be in firmly built,
  well-ventilated structures to keep out grubs and small pests.  Buildings with a concrete wall and floor
  are best suited for storage. 
  Subterranean silos are constructed in tropical areas.  The great grain elevators at world ports
  are often startling sights.               The grains were “brayed” between
  two stones in ancient times.  Then a
  mortar and pestle was used, and later millstones operated by wind or
  waterpower.  Most of the old mills had
  a fixed lower stone upon which a movable upper stone revolved.  The grains were dropped into openings in
  the upper stone and gradually worked out between the stones that had grinding
  surfaces cut in radiating lines.  The
  whole grain was milled.             The roller process of milling was
  then perfected.  The first step in
  this process involves cleaning and scouring. 
  This consists of screening, to remove all foreign seeds, dust, sticks,
  straw and pieces of bran.  The grains
  are then thoroughly washed and scoured. 
  The next step is tempering. 
  This prepares the grain for the best condition for milling.  A little water is added that toughens the
  bran and prevents it from breaking up so that it will flake out all in one
  piece.  Finally the conditioned and
  tempered wheat is submitted to breaking, grinding and rolling.  The grains are first ground between
  corrugated iron rollers, the so-called “first break.”  This cracks the grain and almost flattens
  it.  A small quantity of flour, the
  “break flour” is separated out by sieves while the main portion goes to the
  “second break” for more complete flattening and the partial separation of the
  bran and embryo.  This process is
  repeated until five sets of rollers, each moving at a different speed, have
  been used.  In each case bolting
  separates the ground material from the coarse bran.  After a while all the bran is removed and the purified material
  is passed to smooth rollers for final granulation.  Finally it is bolted with a cloth (originally silk) containing
  12,000 meshes per square inch and is then ready for packing.  The final product is the best grade of
  flour or the “First Patent.  Material
  that has been separated out is known as middlings and may be processed and
  made into inferior grades of flour, or used for other purposes.  Granular particles midway in size between
  the grain and flour, are known as semolinas. 
  Durum wheat semolina is used for macaroni and ordinary wheat semolina
  for farinas.             The above-described process
  produces white flour.  In the milling
  of graham flour the entire grain is used while in whole-wheat flour only a
  part of the bran is removed.   Wheat Production
  & Consumption             The world production of wheat
  increases steadily with the United States producing over one-quarter the
  amount.  Kansas and North Dakota are
  the leading states.  Other large
  wheat-producing countries are Russia, China, Canada, India, France, Italy,
  Germany, Argentina, Turkey and Australia.             France has led in the per capita
  consumption of wheat, followed by New Zealand, Australia, the United States,
  Great Britain, Germany and Canada. 
  The United States per capita consumption of wheat was once estimated
  at 4.5 bushels.              
  Wheat products are almost certainly the most widely used articles of
  the human diet.  In the United States
  they furnish about one-fifth of the total food materials of an average
  family.  The flour is used mainly for
  making wheat bread.  Where other
  cereals are used the produce is called corn bread or rye bread, etc.  The hard wheats provide bread flour while
  the flour from soft wheats is used for cakes, biscuits, pastry, crackers,
  etc.  Other edible by-products are
  breakfast foods and the various farinas; and the pastas such as macaroni,
  spaghetti and noodles.  Semolinas are
  used for macaroni.  These are
  separated from the flour and bran and mixed with 30 percent water.  The resulting dough is kneaded and put in
  a hydraulic press.  The dough is
  squeezed out through holes in the bottom. 
  Each hole has a little pin in the center with the result that a hollow
  tube of dough is formed.  Strings of
  dough are cut into 3-ft. lengths and are dried and cured at a temperature of
  70 deg. Fahrenheit.  Spaghetti and
  vermicelli are merely small types of macaroni.  Rolling out the dough into thin strips makes noodles.  Durum wheat is used for macaroni.            
  Wheat is also used in the manufacture of beer and other alcoholic
  beverages and industrial alcohol.  It
  is an excellent livestock feed.  A
  special kind is grown for the preparation of starch for use in the sizing of
  textile fibers.  Wheat straw excels
  all other kinds because of its very great strength.  It has been used for seats of chairs, mattress stuffing and the
  manufacture of such diverse articles as straw carpets, string, baskets,
  beehives and wickerwork.  Leghorn hats
  are straw hats made from the bearded wheat of Tuscany.  Wheat straw is also used for packing and
  thatching and as a fodder and manure. 
  The entire wheat plant is also a valuable source of fodder.   - - - -
  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -             Indian corn or maize, Zea mays,
  is America’s main contribution to the important group of cereals.  Maize had been thought to have originated
  in a wild state in the lowlands of southern Mexico and Central America from
  which it spread to the Andes where its cultivation goes back to prehistoric
  time.  The ancestor was probably
  teosinte a primitive ancestor that bore a single row of kernels in a
  husk.  Selection in southern Mexico
  resulted in a cob with several rows of kernels.  Later development produced the longer cob or ear familiar as
  the commercial maize of modern times. Grains of this later variety maize found
  in the tombs of the Incas in Peru represent several different varieties, so
  that the plant must have been grown for many centuries prior even to the
  period of the Inca civilization.  From
  Peru is has been thought to have moved northward again and played a prominent
  role in the civilization of the Mayas and Aztecs.  The Amerindians in New Mexico grew it as early as 2,000
  B.C.  By the time of Columbus maize
  was growing all the way from the Great lakes and the lower St. Lawrence
  valley to Chile and Argentina.             Maize was introduced into Europe
  by Columbus, or possibly
  earlier,  and into Asia by the earlier Portuguese
  explorers.  It is now grown
  worldwide.  Large yields are possible
  from maize even under primitive conditions of agriculture.              
  The largest of all cereals, maize is a tall annual grass that can
  attain a height of 3-15 ft.  The
  jointed stem is solid and contains a considerable of sugar when not
  mature.  The leaves are large and
  narrow with wavy margins.  There is an
  extensive fibrous root system with aerial prop roots at the base of the stem.  Two kinds of flowers are the tassel, at
  the top of the stem, which bears the staminate flowers and the cob or ear
  with pistillate flowers.  The ear is
  produced lower down on the stalk and thus is protected by the leaves.  Each ovary has a long silky style, the
  corn silk.  The ovaries, that become
  the mature grains, are produced in rows on the cob.  A husk composed of leafy bracts surrounds the cob.  The grains have a hull (6 %), protein or
  aleurone layer (8-14 %), endosperm (70 %) and embryo (11 %).  Two kinds of endosperm are usually
  present:  a hard, yellow endosperm and
  a soft white starchy endosperm.               There are no known wild species of
  the genus Zea, but The original ancestor was most likely a pod corn
  that gave rise to maize through hybridization between some species of Tripsacum
  and Teosinte, Euchlaena mexicana, a wild relative
  in Mexico.  It is comparatively easy
  to perform breeding trials with maize; even the Amerindians had learned how
  to select, produce and preserve the best varieties that gave rise to easily
  cultivated and rapidly maturing varieties. 
               No other cereal has so many
  different varieties that fall into seven quite distinct classes all of which
  breed true to type.  These are pod, pop, flint, dent, soft, sweet and waxy.  Although they readily hybridize there are
  very little intermediate types produced. 
  The classes differ mainly in the nature of the endosperm and the shape
  of the grain and have been considered by some authorities to be species and
  others to be varieties.  Hill (1952)
  believed that they should be considered as agronomic
  groups.               Each grain is covered with a husk
  in Pod Maize.  The plant is very leafy
  and the tassels heavy.  The grains may
  resemble those of any of the succeeding types, which suggests that pod maize
  might be very close to the primitive form from which the others had been
  derived.  Pod maize has little if any
  commercial value.               The grains are usually elongated
  and oval.  Although small in size they
  are exceptionally hard and flinty with a tough hull.  The endosperm is mostly of the hard glossy
  variety.  On exposure to high
  temperatures, the grains explode forming a snow-white fluffy, palatable mass
  or Popcorn.  It
  results as a sudden expansion of the soft endosperm that turns the grain
  inside out.  It is probably due to the
  expansion of the moisture content of each individual starch grain after
  partial hydrolysis during the heating phase. 
  For a time the flinty protein layer confines the swelling endosperm,
  but eventually this breaks and the sudden release of pressure causes the
  endosperm to become everted about the embryo and hull.  The presence of too much white endosperm
  prevents popping.  There are two kinds
  of popcorn:  rice popcorn, in which
  the grains are pointed and tend to be imbricated, and pearl popcorn, in which
  the grains are rounded and very compact. 
  The plants produce a large number of small ears.  This type of maize was undoubtedly grown
  in prehistoric time.  There are over
  25 different varieties grown for human consumption.              
  The embryo and white endosperm are entirely surrounded by the hard
  endosperm in Flint Maize leaving an undented grain.  Plants attain a height of 5-9 ft, and tend to have two
  ears.  The ears are long and
  cylindrical with hard smooth grains in 8-16 rows that tend toward different
  colors.  Flint maize matures early and
  so is grown in New England and other colder areas of North America.                 The endosperm extends to the top
  of the grain in Dent Maize, with the hard endosperm being present only on the
  sided.  This causes an indentation of
  the mature grain at the top due to the shrinking of the softer material.  This is the largest maize, stems sometimes
  attaining a height of 15 ft.  A single
  ear is produced.  They are very large,
  up to 10 in. long, weighing three-quarter pounds and sometimes having as many
  as 48 rows.  The deep wedge-shaped
  grains are generally yellow or white. 
  Dent maize is the main type grown in the Corn Belt of the United
  States as it gives an enormous yield. 
  It is the source of most of the commercial grain and also of livestock
  fodder and ensilage.  Over 330
  varieties have been developed.              
  The endosperm is entirely lacking in Soft Maize.  This is a very old type that was extensively
  cultivated by the Amerindians because of the ease with which it could be
  crushed.  The grains resemble flint
  maize in shape and appearance, but the size varies from small forms to the
  large Cuzco variety of Peru that are 3/4 in. or more in diameter.  Over 30 different varieties are
  known.  Maturity is very late in the
  season and it is not grown in any quantity in North America.               In Sweet Maize the entire
  endosperm is translucent, and the starch has been partially changed to
  sugar.  The grains are broad and
  wedge-shaped with a typical wrinkled surface.  The plant is adapted to the cooler areas and is the main type
  grown in northern areas of North America for canning purposes.  The grain is used in the unripe
  state.  Over 65 varieties have been
  developed.               The endosperm is waxy in Waxy
  Maize and the carbohydrate material occurs in a different form from that in
  other varieties.  It is used as a
  substitute for tapioca.  The starch is
  entirely amylopectin, whereas ordinary cornstarch is a mixture of amylopectin
  and amylose.              
  Being summer annual maize requires very definite environmental
  conditions for proper development. 
  The plant does best in a fertile, friable, well-drained alluvium, such
  as the deep, warm, black loams along river bottoms and in drained
  swamps.  These soils must have a high
  organic and nitrogen content and must not bake out.  Additionally, temperature, sunlight and moisture are limiting
  factors.  The temperature of both the
  air and soil is important, especially during the growing season from May to
  September in the Northern Hemisphere (November to March in the Southern
  Hemisphere).  A mean average summer
  temperature of 75 deg. Fahrenheit is optimum, but temperatures below 66 deg. Fahrenheit
  are detrimental.  Cloudy days hinder
  development.  Adequate moisture is
  essential, with the optimum being a 20-inch annual rainfall occurring mostly
  in summer.  There is a great
  difference in growth habit under different climatic conditions and there are
  varieties adapted to each type.  A
  continental climate is most favorable. 
  The growing season varies from 90-160 days, depending on the locality.  Maize does mature adequately north of 50
  deg. of latitude although it can be grown there as livestock fodder.             There are relatively few regions
  that have the right combination of the necessary environmental conditions and
  where maize can be raised as a commercial crop on a large scale.  The principal maize growing regions of the
  world include the east, central and middle western United States; the Mexican
  plateau; the Argentine pampas; the highlands of Brazil; the basins of the
  Danube, Dnieper and Po river in Europe; northern India; China and Manchuria;
  Vietnam; java; the Nile valley; and South Africa.  The most prolific area for maize is the great Corn Belt of the
  United States, located in the Mississippi valley in the states of Illinois,
  Indiana, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska.             To grow maize on a commercial
  scale the fields must be well plowed and harrowed.  The seed is planted to a depth of 1-3 in. in regularly spaced
  rows.  Constant weeding and hoeing are
  necessary with care necessary not to injure the roots.  The use of fertilizers and crop rotation
  are advisable.  Maize has
  comparatively few natural enemies, the corn borer being the worst insect and
  corn smut the most serious of the fungus pests.  Drought may cause very serious damage.             There have been very few changes
  in harvesting procedures over the millennia. 
  On small farms the ears are still husked by hand directly in the
  field, and cattle are allowed to graze on the stalks.  On larger farms the maize is cut with a
  corn knife or a machine.  The stalks
  are stacked to permit additional ripening of the grain.  After a month of this curing process the
  ears are husked by machine.  Maize
  must be stored in well-ventilated bins to allow excess moisture to evaporate
  and to properly protect against rodents and small pests.               No cereal is used in so many ways as Maize.  About one-half the crop is used as a food
  for livestock.  The grain is very
  nutritious with a high percentage of easily digested carbohydrates, fats and
  proteins and very few deleterious substances.  The pork industry is dependent almost entirely maize in the
  United States and has used about 40 percent of the total amount raised.  Cattle, horses and other domestic animals
  are also fed maize.  It has been
  estimated that 10-12 lbs. of maize is converted into 1-lb of beef, while 5-6
  lbs. yields 1-lb. of pork.  Not only
  is the grain valuable as a livestock feed but the entire plant is an
  important fodder.  It can be used
  green, dried or as silage.  For silage
  the leaves and stems are cut into small pieces and placed in silos.  Here a slight fermentation occurs and the
  resulting produce is more palatable for cattle.  Stover, the residue after the ears have been removed, is also
  fed to cattle or used for silage.             Although Maize is an important
  food in Neotropical America, it is not widely used as food in the rest of the
  world.  Cornmeal is a poor breadstuff,
  owing to the absence of gluten, and corn bread is very crumbly and cannot be
  baked in loaves.  The meal was first
  prepared by merely pounding the grain. 
  Later millstones were used and now a milling process involving the use
  of rollers has been substituted.  The
  whole grain was formerly used in milling, but the fatty oil, present in the
  embryo, gave an unpleasant odor and taste to the meal.  In modern processes the embryo and hull
  are removed.  Both white and yellow
  meals are milled.  Cornmeal has many
  uses in other countries and in the southern United States.  When boiled with water it becomes mush or
  hasty pudding, the Italian polenta. 
  It is often baked in cakes such as Johnny Cakes, ashcakes, hoecakes,
  corn pone, and the Mexican tortillas. 
  For corn bread the meal is mixed with wheat or rye flour.  Scrapple is cornmeal that has been boiled
  with scraps of pork, liver and kidney and then seasoned and fried.  Hominy or samp and hulled corn are
  prepared by soaking the grains in the lye of wood ashes to remove the hull
  and them cooking until soft.  Small
  portions of the hard endosperm obtained during the milling process constitute
  hominy grits.  The grain is also used
  in the preparation of many breakfast foods. 
  In North America much maize on the cob is eaten, and sweet corn is
  extensively canned.            
  Industrial uses of maize and maize products have steadily increased in
  importance.  The manufacture of
  cornstarch and its derivatives, glucose or corn syrup, corn sugar, dextrins
  and industrial alcohol and the production and uses of corn oil obtained from
  the embryo are important commodities. 
  The grain is used for making various alcoholic beverages and the
  fibers in the stalks have been sued for making paper and yarn.  The pith can be made into explosives or
  light packing material.  The inner
  husks are for cigarette papers and the cobs are for fuel, smoking pork
  products, and as a source of charcoal and furfural, the latter a raw material
  used in making solvents, explosives, plastics, synthetic rubber and
  nylon.  Zein, the protein in maize,
  can be made into artificial fibers with good tensile strength and wool like
  properties.  Ethanol is not a common
  ingredient in gasoline in North America.             
  Usually the United States produces nearly one-half of the world’s
  supply of maize.  Iowa and Illinois
  are the leading states, but through irrigation other states have begun to
  produce it also and various amounts are grown in every other state as well.             
  The utilization of hybrid maize has greatly increased the
  production.  Crossing two carefully
  selected superior inbred strains produces hybrid seed.  The first generation single crosses are
  uniform in size like the parents, but the ears are small.  They are especially suited for the
  production of sweet-corn seed. 
  Double-cross hybrids that result from the combination of two single crosses,
  are exceptionally vigorous and produce larger uniform ears with from 15-20
  percent more kernels.  The yield from
  hybrid seed is increased from 5-15 bushels per acre.  The raising of hybrid corn and the
  production of the seeds has become an important enterprise.             In order or amount produced the
  United States leads the world followed by China, Argentina, Brazil, India,
  Mexico, South Africa, Italy and Russia.   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -             Rice, Oryza sativa,
  replaces all other cereals in tropical countries as the staff of life and
  dominates the economic and social structure. 
  Over half the world’s populations find rice as an indispensable
  food.  Over 95 % of the world crop is
  produced in the Orient.             Rice cultivation extends back into
  the ancient past with no authentic records as to when it started.  The plant originated somewhere in
  Southeastern Asia, but it has spread to every warm region of the world.  The history of rice and the history of
  China are closely tied.  Rice was
  first cultivated in China with records going back further than 2,000
  B.C.  In classical Chinese the words
  for agriculture and rice culture are synonymous.  This indicates that rice was the dominant crop at the time the
  language was taking form.  In other
  languages the words for rice and food are identical.  Rice was introduced into India before the
  time of the Greeks and very early reached Syria and Northern Africa.  The first rice was grown in Europe in 1468
  in Italy.  The first rice grown in
  America was in South Carolina in 1694 from seed brought from Madagascar.               Rice is a large annual grass that
  grows to a height of from 2-4 ft. 
  Instead of bearing an ear, rice produces a panicle, an inflorescence
  composed of a number of fine branches, each terminating in a single grain
  surrounded by a husk.  The grains are
  easily detached together with this brown husk.  In this condition it is known as paddy.  Innumerable varieties of rice have been
  developed.  These differ in the color,
  shape, size, flavor and other traits of the grain.  One of these types contains a sugary substance instead of
  starch, which forms a soft, sticky palatable mass on boiling.  Other species of Oryza occur as
  wild plants in the tropics of both hemispheres.              
  Rice prefers a climate where the average summer temperature does not
  go below 77 deg. Fahrenheit.  It grows
  best on damp soils underlain with semi-impervious subsoil in places where it
  can be flooded.  The delta and flood
  plains of the monsoon region are especially favorable.  One type of rice, the upland or hill rice
  may be grown without irrigation.  This
  kind had been preferred in Central and South America.  Elsewhere the lowland rice that requires
  flooding during part of its development, is grown almost exclusively.  Rice culture in wet areas is similar
  worldwide.  In many countries
  primitive methods of agriculture are used. 
  In developed countries rice cultivation has had a remarkable
  expansion.             The fields are plowed or hoed and
  the rice is sown broadcast or transplanted from seedbeds when 9-10 in.
  high.  The young plants are covered
  with water, at first only at night, but later continuously, and the water is
  kept circulating.  Upon ripening the water
  is drawn off and the fields are allowed to dry out.  Rice is harvested in a manner similar to wheat and the stalks
  are stacked up to dry.  There may be
  two or three crops a year.  In the
  United States rice production is wholly mechanized.               Rice grains are removed by
  threshing or by drawing the stalks through narrow slits.  When used directly for daily consumption
  the rice is left in the “paddy” condition because it stores better that
  way.  The grains are husked just
  before they are to be used, and they are then pounded in a mortar with a
  wooden mallet and winnowed.  The
  resulting grain is very nutritious for it contains considerable protein and
  fat as well as starch.            
  For commercial preparation of rice, the impurities are removed and the
  paddy is passed between millstones to break up the husk.  Blowers remove the chaff.  The grain is then pounded in huge mortars
  and a portion of the bran layer and embryo is removed.  The waste is known as rice bran.  The white rice is then scoured by friction
  and polished and a coating of glucose, talk or chalk is added.  During these last processes the outer,
  more nutritive parts of the grain are removed.  The rice polish that is left as a residue is twice as
  nutritious as the finished product.               Rice is used mainly as a food by
  over half the world’s population.  It
  needs to be supplemented by legumes or some other food rich in proteins.  A diet of rice and soybeans constitutes
  the food of millions of people in Asia. 
  The polished rice, which reaches the world markets, is much less
  nutritious, but its use is widespread. 
  Rice hulls and rice polish are valuable as livestock feed.  The straw may be plaited and made into
  hats, shoes and other articles.  Rice
  starch is widely used in Europe. 
  Intoxicating beverages are made from rice in Japan and other areas.                 China continues to produce most of
  the world’s rice, followed by India and Pakistan.  Other important countries that produce rice are Japan, Java,
  Vietnam, Thailand, Burma, Brazil, Korea and the Philippines.  The United States produces a substantial
  amount in the southeastern States and California.  Rice is also grown in Egypt and Africa while Italy leads the
  European production.                       |