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Soft Red Winter – Soft, low-protein wheat used for cakes, pie crusts, biscuits, and muffins. Cake flour, pastry flour, and some self-rising flours with baking powder and salt added, for example, are made from soft red winter wheat. It is primarily traded on the Chicago Board of Trade.
In the United States, about 40% of the total wheat production is of a strain known as hard red winter wheat, with soft red winter wheat contributing another 15% of the annual wheat crop. There are also winter varities of white wheat. [4] Soft red winter wheat is also grown in the Canadian province of Ontario, along with white winter wheat. [5]
Red Wheat is a 1970 Yugoslavian drama film. Red Wheat may also refer to: Red Fife wheat, a wheat variety grown in Canada; Soft red wheat, hard red winter wheat, or hard red spring, classifications of wheat in the United States
In the United States, wheat is classified into classes and sub-classes. In classes, wheat is split into eight different groups: hard red spring, hard red winter, soft red winter, durum, hard white, soft white, mixed and un-classed wheat. These classes are further subdivided into five grades (US. No.1-5), [15] with the exception of unclassed wheat.
A friend of his sent him seed from Glasgow in 1842. It is a good yielding wheat, high in quality; an excellent milling wheat. It was grown in Canada from 1860 to 1900, and was the industry standard. Ladoga, 1888. A variety originally from Russia. Early maturing, and the parent of Preston and Stanley. Hard Red Calcutta, 1890. A variety from ...
Hard red spring wheat (HRS) (also has a sub-classification of Dark Northern Spring Wheat [16]) of high protein value: 20%: North Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, and South Dakota. [18] [19] Preferred for making high quality bread Soft red winter wheat (SRW) 20%: Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Michigan, New York, and the Southeast
Triticum compactum or club wheat is a species of wheat adapted to low-humidity growing conditions. T. compactum is similar enough to common wheat (T. aestivum) that it is often considered a subspecies, T. aestivum compactum. It can be distinguished by its more compact ear due to shorter rachis segments, giving it its common name.