Front cover image for Pseudocereals and Less Common Cereals : Grain Properties and Utilization Potential

Pseudocereals and Less Common Cereals : Grain Properties and Utilization Potential

This book, written by leading grain scientists from Europe and Africa, examines six such grains that have been important food crops in various parts of the world and have the potential for much greater and more widespread use. The chemistry, nutritional value, food processing technologies and potential applications of three true cereals: sorghum, spelt wheat and the major millet species, and three dicotyledonous pseudocereals: grain amaranth, buckwheat and quinoa are discussed. Just three cereal grains account for more than 75% of all grains produced worldwide. This causes high risks for the future of humankind via catastrophic food crop failures and is detrimental to our long-term health (deficiencies of micronutritients, food allergenes and intolerances). In addition, the intensive cultivation practices needed to produce the required high yields of these cereals is frequently leading to environmental degradation, and they are often inappropriate in the Developing World
eBook, English, 2002
Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2002
1 online resource (xviii, 270 pages 80 illustrations, 20 illustrations in color.)
9783662095447, 9783540429395, 3662095440, 3540429395
851383034
Print version:
J.R.N. Taylor, P.S. Belton: Introduction
P.R. Shewry: The Major Seed Storage Proteins of Spelt Wheat, Sorghum, Millets and Pseudocereals
P.S. Belton, J.R.N. Taylor: Sorghum
J.R.N. Taylor, M.L Parker: Quinoa
P. Biacs, E. Aubrecht, I. Lder, J. Lajos: Buckwheat
R. Cubadda, E. Marconi: Spelt Wheat
A Babatunde Obilana, E. Manyasa: Millets
E. Berghofer, R. Schoenlechner: Grain Amaranth
English