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  2. List of barley cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_barley_cultivars

    'Beacon', a six-row malting barley with rough awns, short rachilla hairs and colorless aleurone, it was released in 1973, and was the first North Dakota State University barley that had resistance to loose smut. Bere, a six-row barley, is currently cultivated mainly on 5-15 hectares of land in Orkney, Scotland. Two additional parcels on the ...

  3. How to add barley to your meals - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/barley-packed-fiber-other...

    Pearled barley is the more common of the two, and typically takes 25 to 30 minutes to cook, while hulled barley may take up to an hour. Barley is packed with fiber and more.

  4. Groat (grain) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groat_(grain)

    Groats (or in some cases, "berries") are the hulled kernels of various cereal grains, such as oats, wheat, rye, and barley. Groats are whole grains that include the cereal germ and fiber-rich bran portion of the grain, as well as the endosperm (which is the usual product of milling). Groats can also be produced from pseudocereal seeds such as ...

  5. Barley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barley

    The Barley Barn at Cressing, Essex, built around 1220; its name means "barley-store". [3] The Old English word for barley was bere. [4] This survives in the north of Scotland as bere; it is used for a strain of six-row barley grown there. [5] Modern English barley derives from the Old English adjective bærlic, meaning "of barley".

  6. Hordeum spontaneum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hordeum_spontaneum

    Hordeum spontaneum, commonly known as wild barley or spontaneous barley, is the wild form of the grass in the family Poaceae that gave rise to the cereal barley (Hordeum vulgare). Domestication is thought to have occurred on two occasions, first about ten thousand years ago in the Fertile Crescent and again later, several thousand kilometres ...

  7. List of porridges - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_porridges

    The term is of Italian origin, derived from the Latin for hulled and crushed grain (especially barley-meal). Puliszka – is a coarse cornmeal porridge [16] in Hungary, mostly in Transylvania. Traditionally, it is prepared with either sweetened milk or goat's milk cottage cheese, bacon or mushrooms.

  8. Agriculture in Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Ireland

    Evidence from archaeological sites concludes that hulled barley and oats were the primary crops cultivated at this time. Other crops such as wheat , flax , pea , and bean have been discovered at these archaeological sites as well; however, only occasionally, suggesting their subordinate position in medieval agriculture production.

  9. Pearl barley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl_barley

    Pearl barley, or pearled barley, is barley that has been processed to remove its fibrous outer hull and polished to remove some or all of the bran layer. [ citation needed ] It is the most common form of barley for human consumption because it cooks faster and is less chewy than other, less-processed forms of the grain [ 1 ] such as "hulled ...