Rye
- For other uses, see Rye (disambiguation).
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Secale cereale M.Bieb. |
Rye (Secale cereale) is a grass grown extensively as a grain and forage crop. It is a member of the wheat tribe (Triticeae) and is closely related to barley and wheat. Rye grain is used for flour, rye bread, rye beer, some whiskies, some vodkas, and animal fodder. It can also be eaten whole, either as boiled rye berries, or by being rolled, similar to rolled oats.
Rye is a cereal and should not be confused with Ryegrass which is used for lawns, pasture, and hay for livestock.
Note on barley: Barley is any annual cereal grass of the genus Hordeum, and in particular the species Hordeum vulgare. The term also is used for the edible grain of these plants.
Description
Rye is a member of the grass family, Poaceae, one of the largest and most important plant families, which also includes wheat, rice, barley, and sugar cane. There are about 600 genera and perhaps ten thousand species of grasses.
Grasses, like orchids and palms, are monocotyledons. Monocotyledons are one of two major groups of flowering plants (angiosperms), the other being dicotyledons. Monocotyledons have only one cotyledon, or embryo leaf, rather than the two found in dicotyledons. The largest family in the monocotyledon group (and in the flowering plants) is the orchids. However, the most economically important family in this group is the grasses, which include the true grains (rice, wheat, maize, barley, rye, etc.). Unlike dicotyledons, the true grasses are specialized for wind pollination and produce smaller flowers.
Triticeae is a tribe within the Pooideae subfamily of grasses that includes genera with many domesticated species. Major crop genera are found in this tribe including wheat (See Wheat taxonomy), barley, and rye; crops in other genera include some for human consumption and others used for animal feed or rangeland protection. Among the world's cultivated species this tribe has some of the most complex genetic histories. An example is bread wheat, which contains the genomes of three species, only one of them originally a wheat Triticum species. Seed storage proteins in Triticeae are implicated in various food allergies and intolerances.
Rye is one of the most important and widely consumed cereals produced in the world. It was
Ryes
- cereale (Cereal Rye) - Livestock feed and sour dough bread - 6 subspecies.
- cornutum-ergot (Ergot of Spurred Rye) - herbal medicine at very low doses,[1] deadly poisonous as food.
- strictum - actively cultivated
- sylvestre - (Tibetan Rye) - actively cultivated in Tibet and China highlands.
- vavilovi (Armenian Wild Rye) - edible seeds, thickener.
History
The early history of rye is unclear. The wild ancestor of rye has not been identified with certainty, but is one of a number of species that grow wild in central and eastern Turkey, and adjacent areas. Domesticated rye occurs in small quantities at a number of Neolithic sites in Turkey, such as PPNB Can Hasan III, but is otherwise virtually absent from the archaeological record until the Bronze Age of central Europe, c. 1800-1500 B.C.E.[2] It is possible that rye travelled west from Turkey as a minor admixture in wheat, and was only later cultivated in its own right. Although archeological evidence of this grain have been found in Roman contexts along the Rhine Danube and in the British Isles, Pliny the Elder is dismissive of rye, writing that it "is a very poor food and only serves to avert starvation" and wheat is mixed into it "to mitigate its bitter taste, and even then is most unpleasant to the stomach" (N.H. 18.40).
Since the Middle Ages, rye has been widely cultivated in Central and Eastern Europe and is the main bread cereal in most areas east of the French-German border and north of Hungary.
Claims of much earlier cultivation of rye, at the Epipalaeolithic site of Tell Abu Hureyra in the Euphrates valley of northern Syria, remain controversial. Critics point to inconsistencies in the radiocarbon dates, and identifications based solely on grain, rather than on chaff.
Agronomy
Rye, alone or overseeded, is planted as a livestock forage or harvested for hay. It is highly tolerant of soil acidity and is more tolerant of dry and cool conditions than wheat, though not as tolerant of cold as barley. In Turkey, rye is often grown as an admixture in wheat crops. It is appreciated for the flavour it brings to bread, as well as its ability to compensate for wheat's reduced yields in hard years.
The flame moth, rustic shoulder-knot and turnip moth are among the species of Lepidoptera whose larvae feed on rye.
Production and consumption statistics
Top Ten Rye Producers — 2005 (million metric ton) | |
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Russia | 3,6 |
Poland | 3,4 |
Germany | 2,8 |
Belarus | 1,2 |
Ukraine | 1,1 |
People's Republic of China | 0,6 |
Canada | 0,4 |
Turkey | 0,3 |
United States | 0,2 |
Austria | 0,2 |
World Total | 13,3 |
Source: UN Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO)[3] |
Rye is grown primarily in Eastern, Central and Northern Europe. Main rye belt stretches from northern Germany through Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania and Latvia into central and northern Russia. Rye is also grown in North America (Canada and the USA), in South America (Argentina), in Turkey, in Kazakstan and in northern China.
Production levels of rye are falling in most of the producing nations due to falling demand. For instance, production of rye in Russia fell from 13.9 million tons in 1992 to just 3,4 m t in 2005. Corresponding figures for other countries are as follows: Poland - 5,9 m t in 1992 and 3.4 m t in 2005; Germany - 3,3 m t & 2,8 m t; Belarus - 3,1 m t & 1,2 m t; China - 1,7 m t & 0,6 m t; Kazakhstan - 0,6 m t & 0,02 m t.
Most of rye is consumed locally, and is exported only to neighbouring counties, but not worldwide.
Diseases
Rye is highly susceptible to the ergot fungus. Consumption of ergot-infected rye by humans and animals results in a serious medical condition known as ergotism. Ergotism can cause both physical and mental harm, including convulsions, miscarriage, necrosis of digits, and hallucinations. Historically, damp northern countries that have depended on rye as a staple crop were subject to periodic epidemics of this condition.
Uses
Rye bread, including pumpernickel, is a widely eaten food in Northern and Eastern Europe. Rye is also used to make the familiar crisp bread. Rye flour has a lower gluten content than wheat flour, and contains a higher proportion of soluble fiber.
Some other uses of rye include rye whiskey and use as an alternative medicine in a liquid form, known as rye extract. Often marketed as Oralmat, rye extract is a liquid obtained from rye and similar to that extracted from wheatgrass. Its benefits are said to include a strengthened immune system, increased energy levels and relief from allergies, but there is no clinical evidence for its efficacy.
Rye straw is used to make corn dollies.
See also
- Ergot and ergotism
- Rye beer
- Rye whisky
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
- Secale cereale (TSN 42089). Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Accessed on September 22 2002.
- Multilingual taxonomic information from the University of Melbourne
External links
- Gordon Hillmann: New evidence of Lateglacial cereal cultivation at Abu Hureyra on the Euphrates, in: The Holocene 11/4 (July 2001), p. 383-393.
- Growing Rye hosted by the UNT Government Documents Department
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