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Barley
Barley is the fifth largest cultivated cereal crop in the world (53 million hectares or 132 million acres). Major barley producers are :
Cultivated barley is related to the wild barley (Hordeum spontaneum) which still can be found in the Middle East. Evidence suggests that domestication of barley started 6000 years BC in the Middle East. Barley is widely adaptable and is currently a major crop of the temperate and tropical areas. Barley is a staple food for humans and animals. Malting barley is a key ingredient in beer and whiskey production. The 1881 Household Cyclopedia adds:
Next to wheat the most valuable grain is barley, especially on light and sharp soils. VarietiesBarley may be divided into two sorts, fall and spring; to which may be added a bastard variety, called bear or bigg, which affords similar nutriment or substance, though of inferior quality. The spring is cultivated like oats; the fall, like fall wheat. Early barley, under various names, was formerly sown in Britain upon lands that had been previously summer-fallowed, or were in high condition. The most proper seed season for spring barley is any time in March or April, though we have seen good crops produced, the seed of which was sown at a much later period. Barley may also be divided by the number of kernal rows in the head. There are two types; two-row barley and six-row barley. Two-row barley has a lower protein content than six-row barley but a higher enzyme content. High protein barley is best suited for animal feed or malt that has a large adjunct content. Two-row barley is best suited for pure malts. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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