V-Slicer V8 Juice Vache Qui Rit Cheese Vacherin Chaput Cheese Vacherin d'Abondance Vacherin du Haut-Doubs Vacherin Fribourgeois Vacherin Mont d'Or Valdeón Cheese Valdôtaine -- À la Valencia Oranges Valencia Peanuts Valenciano Pumpkins Valencienne -- À la Valentine Beans Valentine Buns Valerian Valetta Potatoes Valisa Potatoes Vallarta Beans Vallée des Baux Cracked Olives Valor Potatoes Van Cherries Van Der Hum Cream Liqueur Van Gogh Potatoes Vandevere Apples Vanessa Potatoes Vanilla Vanilla -- Marseille Vanilla Baking Powder Vanilla Bean Paste Vanilla Essence Vanilla Extract Vanilla Ice Cream Vanilla Pod Previous | Next | Triticale© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedTriticale is a modern grain derived by crossing rye and wheat, giving it rye's ability to survive cold temperatures and the somewhat higher protein of rye, along with wheat's resistance to disease (particularly ergot, which is a poisonous fungus affecting rye crops) and higher gluten levels. Most of the Triticale grown in North America is used as livestock feed. The rest is used commercially in cereals and muffin mixes, or sold in "health food" stores in various forms such as Triticale Berries, Cracked Triticale, Triticale Flakes, and Triticale Flour. Even though the "health foodies" have taken to it owing to its superior nutritional value to wheat, it just hasn't caught on with the general public because it's not really ready for the big time where it matters -- making bread. Even though breeding improvements are focussing on further increasing the gluten levels you still can't make what most people would consider a decent loaf of bread from it owing to texture and insufficient loaf volume. Testers have found that a blend of 50% Triticale / 50% wheat flour will produce a loaf of bread of a good quality.
Other entries for:GrainsAmaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Cereals, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Quinoa, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale, Wheat |
|

