Sorghum
© Copyright 2010. Do not copy. All rights reserved and enforced.Sorghum is a cereal grass with broad corn-like leaves and large clusters of grain atop tall stalks. In Africa, where Sorghum is believed to have originated, it is an important food grain, as well as a basic ingredient in beer. In tropical areas, it is a basic cereal, as wheat is for us. Worldwide, it is the third largest food grain -- more than 50% of it is grown for human consumption (as opposed to animal feed.)
In the American South, the grain from Sorghum would be used for grain products, then the stalks would be made into Sorghum Molasses. It's easy to see why southern farmers were so found of this crop.
Sorghum is sold in these forms: wheat berries, pearled grain, gluten-free flour, and Sorghum Molasses (the cane is pressed to extract the juice, then boiled down to create a golden syrup which is popular in many parts of the States.)
Sorghum Molasses was a favourite sweetener, particularly in the American South, during the 1800s and early 1900s. Around the end of World War I refined sugar products became more readily available and less expensive, thus causing a decline in the use of Sorghum as a sweetener. Due to its calcium and potassium content, it has slightly more nutritive value than many other sweeteners.
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