Wheat and Rice - Chetan Patel
 

Wheat and Rice

Wheat and Rice

Wheat, 

any of several species of cereal grasses of the genus Triticum (family Poaceae) and their edible grains. Wheat is one of the oldest and most important of the cereal crops. Of the thousands of varieties known, the most important are common wheat (Triticum aestivum), used to make bread; durum wheat (T. durum), used in making pasta (alimentary pastes) such as spaghetti and macaroni; and club wheat (T. compactum), a softer type, used for cake, crackers, cookies, pastries, and flours. Additionally, some wheat is used by industry for the production of starch, paste, malt, dextrose, gluten, alcohol, and other products.

semelparity; wheat

boza

semelparity; wheat

Cereal crops such as wheat are semelparous, meaning that they die after their first reproduction.

Robert Glusic/Getty Images

boza

Boza, a traditional fermented drink in eastern Europe and the Middle East that is made from wheat, millet, or bulgur and topped with cinnamon and roasted chickpeas.

Rice, 

(Oryza sativa), edible starchy cereal grain and the grass plant (family Poaceae) by which it is produced. Roughly one-half of the world population, including virtually all of East and Southeast Asia, is wholly dependent upon rice as a staple food; 95 percent of the world’s rice crop is eaten by humans. Rice is cooked by boiling, or it can be ground into a flour. It is eaten alone and in a great variety of soups, side dishes, and main dishes in Asian, Middle Eastern, and many other cuisines. Other products in which rice is used are breakfast cereals, noodles, and such alcoholic beverages as Japanese sake.

No Comments

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.