Pea

From New World Encyclopedia
Pea
Doperwt rijserwt peulen Pisum sativum.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Subfamily: Faboideae
Tribe: Vicieae
Genus: Pisum
Species: P. sativum
Binomial name
Pisum sativum
L.

The pea, Pisum sativum, was one of the first plants cultivated by humans and remains an important food crop today. It is a member of the legume family, Fabaceae, along with beans and peanuts. Some other legumes are also called peas, including the cowpea or black-eyed pea, Vigna unguiculata, and the chickpea or garbanzo bean, Cicer arietinum.

The pea plant

The pea plant is an annual herb and can be a bush or vine depending on the variety. As it grows quickly the stems are slender and small in diameter. They grow to a length of 30 to 150 cm (1 to 5 feet). The pea plant can tolerate frost and can therefore sprout in the early spring. The flowers are white, pink, or purple and blossom sequentially starting from the bottom of the plant. Cultivated peas are self pollinating. The fruits, called "pods", each contain 2 to 10 seeds, called "peas" (Muehlbauer 1997).

History and cultivation

The pea is native to the Western Asia and North Africa. Wild peas can still be found in Afghanistan, Iran and Ethiopia (Oelke 1991). They seem to have been first cultivated at the beginning of agriculture in the Middle East, perhaps as long as 10,000 years ago. By 4000 years ago pea cultivation had spread throughout Europe and east into India. By the first century C.E. peas were introduced to China and soon after 1492 to the New World (Muehlbauer 1997).

Peas require cool weather. They do not do well when the temperature rises above 27 degrees C (81 degrees F). If frost injury does occur and the main shoot is killed, new shoots will originate from nodes below the soil surface (Oelke 1991). Many cultivars reach maturity about 60 days after planting. In some places peas are planted in fall and grow through the winter and in others they are planted in early spring.

Since 1980 the world production of peas has been generally increasing. In 2000 Canada produced about half of the world's pea crop with France, China, and Russia the next largest producers. The two largest uses of peas are for human food and animal feed. In Europe most peas are used to feed animals. (AEP 2006).

Some of the reasons the pea has been popular as a food crop is that it matures early and can grow in cold, semi-arid conditions. It has been breed for centuries as a table vegetable and in many places various institutions are working on future improved varieties (Hernandez Bemejo1992).

Peas as food

Fresh peas are often eaten boiled and flavored with butter and/or spearmint as a side dish vegetable. Fresh peas are also used in pot pies, salads and casseroles. Pod peas (particularly sweet varieties called mangetout and sugar peas) are used in stir fried dishes. Pea pods do not keep well once picked, and if not used quickly are best preserved by drying, canning or freezing within a few hours of harvest.

Dry, yellow peas

Dried peas are often made into a soup or simply eaten on their own. In Japan and other East Asian countries including Thailand, Taiwan and Malaysia, the peas are roasted and salted, and eaten as snacks. In the UK, marrowfat peas are used to make pease pudding (or "pease porridge"), a traditional dish. In North America a traditional dish is split pea soup.

In Chinese cuisine, pea sprouts (豆苗 dou miao) are commonly used in stir-fries.

In the United Kingdom, dried, rehydrated and mashed marrowfat peas, known by the public as mushy peas, are popular, originally in the north of England but now ubiquitously, and especially as an accompaniment to fish and chips or meat pies.

Processed peas are mature peas which have been dried, soaked and then heat treated (processed) to prevent spoilage - in the same manner as pasteurising.

Cooked peas are sometimes sold dried and coated with wasabi as a spicy snack.

Peas in science

Gregor Johann Mendel

Pioneer geneticist Gregor Mendel discovered some of the basic principles of genetics by studying how the traits of pea plants are passed down generation to generation.

Cow pea

The Cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) is grown in the semi-arid tropics covering Asia, Africa, southern Europe and Central and South America. Four cultivated subspecies are recognised:

  • Vigna unguiculata subsp. cylindrica Catjang
  • Vigna unguiculata subsp. dekindtiana Black-eyed pea
  • Vigna unguiculata subsp. sesquipedalis Yardlong bean
  • Vigna unguiculata subsp. unguiculata Southern pea

A drought tolerant and warm weather crop, cowpea is well-adapted to the drier regions of the tropics, where other food legumes do not perform well. It also fixes atmospheric nitrogen and grows well in poor soils with more than 85% sand and with less that 0.2% organic matter and low levels of phosphorus. In addition, it is shade tolerant, and therefore, useful as an intercrop with maize, millet, sorghum, sugarcane, and cotton. This makes cowpea an important component of traditional intercropping systems, especially in the subsistence farming systems of the dry savannas in sub-Saharan Africa.

Over 90 percent of the world's cowpea crop is grown in West Africa, with Nigeria, Niger, and Mali the biggest growers(IITA 2006).<not sure if they are talking about all four subspecies here. It's hard for me to believe that yardlong beans in Asia and blackeyed peas in the USA only amount to 5 percent>

The black-eyed pea is a traditional favorite in the southern United States and the yardlong bean in Asia.

Chickpea

The chickpea, chick pea, garbanzo bean, ceci bean, bengal gram, chana or channa (Cicer arietinum)

The plant is 20-50 cm (8-20 inches) to high and has small feathery leaves on both sides of the stem. One seedpod contains two or three peas. The flowers are white- or reddish-blue. Chickpeas need a subtropical or tropical climate and more than 400 mm (16 inches) annual rain. They can be grown in a temperate climate, but yields will be much lower.

The wild ancestor of cultivated chickpeas is thought to be Cicer reticulatum. As this only grows in southeast Turkey this is likely the first place they were cultivated.

Today chickpeas are the third most important food legume world-wide with 95% of production and consumption in developing countries. In 2004 India produced 64% of the global chickpea crop, with Turkey, Pakistan, and Iran the next three largest producers (ICRISAT).

Chickpeas are one of the most nutritious of the dry edible legumes, containing 23% protein, 64% total carbohydrates, 47% starch, 5% fat, 6% crude fiber, 6% soluble sugar and 3% ash. They are also good sources of the minerals phosphorus, calcium, magnesium, iron, and zinc. Chickpea protein digestibility is the highest among the dry edible legumes. They are also a good source of unsaturated fatty acids, primarily linoleic and oleic acids (ICRISAT) .

In Europe and North America chickpeas are most often cooked and eaten whole in various dishes, while in the Middle East and India they are most often ground into flour and made into a paste or baked into bread (Hernández Bermejo 1992).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • European Association for Grain Legume Research (AEP), "Pea" [1]
  • Muehlbauer, F.J. and Tullu, A., 1997,"Pisum sativum L.", Purdue University[2]
  • Oelke, E.A., Oplinger E.S., et al, 1991, "Dry Field Pea", University of Wisconsin[3]
  • Hernández Bermejo, J.E. & León, J., 1992, "Neglected crops: 1492 from a different perspective", Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO)[4]
  • International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), "Chickpea" [5]
  • International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), 2006, "Cowpea" [6]
  • University of Saskatchewan, 2006, "Dry Peas"[7]

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