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Buckwheat

Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum), or common buckwheat,[2][3] is a flowering plant in the knotweed family Polygonaceae cultivated for its grain-like seeds and as a cover crop. The name "buckwheat" is used for several other species, such as Fagopyrum tataricum, a domesticated food plant raised in Asia.

Buckwheat
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Polygonaceae
Genus: Fagopyrum
Species:
F. esculentum
Binomial name
Fagopyrum esculentum
Synonyms[1]
  • Polygonum fagopyrum L. 1753
  • Fagopyrum cereale Raf.
  • Fagopyrum dryandrii Fenzl
  • Fagopyrum emarginatum (Roth) Meisn. 1840
  • Fagopyrum emarginatum Moench 1802
  • Fagopyrum fagopyrum (L.) H.Karst., invalid tautonym
  • Fagopyrum polygonum Macloskie
  • Fagopyrum sagittatum Gilib.
  • Fagopyrum sarracenicum Dumort.
  • Fagopyrum vulgare Hill ex Druce 1913
  • Fagopyrum vulgare T.Nees 1853
  • Polygonum emarginatum Roth

Despite its name, buckwheat is not closely related to wheat. It is not a cereal, nor is it even a member of the grass family. Buckwheat is related to sorrel, knotweed, and rhubarb, and is known as a pseudocereal because its seeds' culinary use is the same as cereals, owing to their high starch content.

Etymology edit

The name "buckwheat" or "beech wheat" comes from its tetrahedral seeds, which resemble the much larger seeds of the beech nut from the beech tree, and the fact that it is used like wheat. The word may be a translation of Middle Dutch boecweite: boec "beech" (Modern Dutch beuk; see PIE *bhago-) and weite "wheat" (Mod. Dut. tarwe, antiquated weit), or maybe a native formation on the same model as the Dutch word.[4]

Description edit

Buckwheat is a herbaceous annual flowering plant growing to about 60 cm, with red stems and pink and white flowers resembling those of knotweeds.[5]: 68  The leaves are arrow-shaped and the fruits are achenes about 5–7 mm with 3 prominent sharp angles.[6]: 94 

Distribution edit

Fagopyrum esculentum is native to south-central China and Tibet,[7] and has been introduced into suitable climates across Eurasia, Africa and the Americas.[7]

History edit

 
Buckwheat, illustration from the Japanese agricultural encyclopedia Seikei Zusetsu (1804)

The wild ancestor of common buckwheat is F. esculentum ssp. ancestrale. F. homotropicum is interfertile with F. esculentum and the wild forms have a common distribution, in Yunnan, a southwestern province of China. The wild ancestor of tartary buckwheat is F. tataricum ssp. potanini.[8]

Common buckwheat was domesticated and first cultivated in inland Southeast Asia, possibly around 6000 BCE, and from there spread to Central Asia and Tibet, and then to the Middle East and Europe, which it reached by the 15th century.[9] Domestication most likely took place in the western Yunnan region of China.[10]

The oldest remains found in China so far date to circa 2600 BCE, while buckwheat pollen found in Japan dates from as early as 4000 BCE. It is the world's highest-elevation domesticate, being cultivated in Yunnan on the edge of the Tibetan Plateau or on the plateau itself. Buckwheat was one of the earliest crops introduced by Europeans to North America. Dispersal around the globe was complete by 2006, when a variety developed in Canada was widely planted in China. In India, buckwheat flour is known as kuttu ka atta and has long been culturally associated with many festivals like Shivratri, Navaratri and Janmashtami. On the day of these festivals, food items made only from buckwheat are consumed.[11]

Cultivation edit

 
Buckwheat with flowers, ripe and unripe seeds
 
Exhibition of Flower Festival, Taiwan

Buckwheat is a short-season crop that grows well in low-fertility or acidic soils; too much fertilizer – especially nitrogen – reduces yields, and the soil must be well drained. In hot climates buckwheat can be grown only by sowing late in the season, so that it blooms in cooler weather. The presence of pollinators greatly increases yield.[citation needed] Nectar from flowering buckwheat produces a dark-colored honey.[12]

The buckwheat plant has a branching root system with a primary taproot that reaches deeply into moist soil.[13] It grows 75 to 125 centimetres (30 to 50 inches) tall.[14] Buckwheat has tetrahedral seeds and produces a flower that is usually white, although can also be pink or yellow.[15] Buckwheat branches freely, as opposed to tillering or producing suckers, enabling more complete adaption to its environment than other cereal crops.[13]

Buckwheat is only raised for grain where a brief time is available for growth, either because the buckwheat is an early or a second crop in the season, or because the total growing season is limited. It establishes quickly, which suppresses summer weeds, and can be a reliable cover crop in summer to fit a small slot of warm season.[14] Buckwheat has a growing period of only 10–12 weeks[16] and it can be grown in high latitude or northern areas.[17] Buckwheat is sometimes used as a green manure, as a plant for erosion control or as wildlife cover and feed.[14]

Production edit

In 2021, world production of buckwheat was 1.9 million tonnes, led by Russia with 49% of the world total, followed by China with 27% and Ukraine with 6%.[18]

Buckwheat production – 2021
Country Production
(tonnes)
  Russia 919,147
  China 502,369
  Ukraine 105,780
  United States 82,359
  Kazakhstan 78,049
  Brazil 65,428
Total: 1,875,068
Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations[18]

Biological control edit

F. esculentum is often studied and used as a pollen and nectar source to increase natural predator numbers to control crop pests.[19] Berndt et al. 2002 found that the results were not entirely promising in one vineyard in New Zealand[20][21][22] but the same team - Berndt et al. 2006, four years later and studying a number of vineyards up and down New Zealand - did find a significant increase in 22 parasitoids, especially Dolichogenidea tasmanica,[22] as did Irvin et al. 1999 for D. t. in Canterbury orchards.[23] Gurr et al. 1998 showed that floral nectaries - and not shelter in or alternate hosts on F. esculentum - were responsible for this increase, and Stephens et al. 1998 for Anacharis spp. on Micromus tasmaniae. Stephens et al. 1998 also first demonstrated a great increase of A. spp. on M. t. (which also commonly predates on F. e.).[23] Cullen et al. 2013 found that vineyards around Waipara had not continued planting buckwheat, suggesting a need for further technique development so that buckwheat will integrate well with real-world vineyard practice.[22] English-Loeb et al. 2003 found that it does sustain greater numbers of Anagrus parasitoids on Erythroneura leafhoppers,[22] and Balzan and Wäckers 2013 found the same for Necremnus artynes and Ferracini et al. 2012 for Necremnus tutae on Tuta absoluta, and thereby act as pest controls in tomato, potato, and to a lesser degree other Solanaceous and non-Solanaceous horticulturals.[24] Kalinova and Moudry 2003 found that further companion planting with other flowers at the wrong time of year may actually cause F. esculentum to be killed by frosts it would have otherwise survived, and Colley and Luna 2000 found that it may delay its flowering to not coincide with the natural enemy it was planted to feed.[19] Foti et al. 2016 found significant short-chain carboxylic acid variation to be the most likely explanation for biocontrol performance variation between cultivars.[19]

Buckwheat
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy1,435 kJ (343 kcal)
71.5 g
Dietary fiber10 g
3.4 g
Saturated0.741 g
Monounsaturated1.04 g
Polyunsaturated1.039 g
0.078 g
0.961 g
13.25 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Thiamine (B1)
9%
0.101 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
35%
0.425 mg
Niacin (B3)
47%
7.02 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)
25%
1.233 mg
Vitamin B6
16%
0.21 mg
Folate (B9)
8%
30 μg
Vitamin C
0%
0 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
2%
18 mg
Copper
55%
1.1 mg
Iron
17%
2.2 mg
Magnesium
65%
231 mg
Manganese
62%
1.3 mg
Phosphorus
50%
347 mg
Potassium
15%
460 mg
Selenium
12%
8.3 μg
Sodium
0%
1 mg
Zinc
25%
2.4 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water9.8 g

"Link to database entry". Food Details. USDA. 170286.
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.

Phytochemicals edit

Buckwheat contains diverse phytochemicals, including rutin, tannins, catechin-7-O-glucoside in groats,[25][26] and fagopyrins,[27][28][29] which are located mainly in the cotyledons of the buckwheat plant.[30] It has almost no levels of inorganic arsenic.[31]

Aromatic compounds edit

Salicylaldehyde (2-hydroxybenzaldehyde) was identified as a characteristic component of buckwheat aroma.[32] 2,5-dimethyl-4-hydroxy-3(2H)-furanone, (E,E)-2,4-decadienal, phenylacetaldehyde, 2-methoxy-4-vinylphenol, (E)-2-nonenal, decanal and hexanal also contribute to its aroma. They all have odour activity value of more than 50, but the aroma of these substances in an isolated state does not resemble buckwheat.[33]

Nutrition edit

With a 100-gram serving of dry buckwheat providing 1,440 kilojoules (343 kilocalories) of food energy, or 380 kJ (92 kcal) cooked, buckwheat is a rich source (20% or more of the Daily Value, DV) of protein, dietary fiber, four B vitamins and several dietary minerals, with content especially high (47 to 65% DV) in niacin, magnesium, manganese and phosphorus (table). Buckwheat is 72% carbohydrates, 10% dietary fiber, 3% fat, 13% protein, and 10% water.

Gluten-free edit

As buckwheat contains no gluten, it may be eaten by people with gluten-related disorders, such as celiac disease, non-celiac gluten sensitivity or dermatitis herpetiformis.[34][35] Nevertheless, buckwheat products may have gluten contamination.[34]

Potential adverse effects edit

Cases of severe allergic reactions to buckwheat and buckwheat-containing products have been reported.[36] Buckwheat contains fluorescent phototoxic fagopyrins.[27] Seeds, flour, and teas are generally safe when consumed in normal amounts[quantify], but fagopyrism can appear in people with diets based on high consumption of buckwheat sprouts, and particularly flowers or fagopyrin-rich buckwheat extracts.[37] Symptoms of fagopyrism in humans may include skin inflammation in sunlight-exposed areas, cold sensitivity, and tingling or numbness in the hands.[37]

Culinary use edit

 
Buckwheat flour
 
Buckwheat (left), buckwheat flakes (fast cooking) (right), and crispbread made of buckwheat flour.

The fruit is an achene, similar to sunflower seed, with a single seed inside a hard outer hull. The starchy endosperm is white and makes up most or all of buckwheat flour. The seed coat is green or tan, which darkens buckwheat flour. The hull is dark brown or black, and some may be included in buckwheat flour as dark specks. The dark flour is known as blé noir (black wheat) in French, along with the name sarrasin (saracen). Similarly, in Italy, it is known as grano saraceno (saracen grain).[38] The grain can be prepared by simple dehulling, milling into farina, to whole-grain flour or to white flour. The grain can be fractionated into starch, germ and hull for specialized uses.

Buckwheat groats are commonly used in western Asia and eastern Europe. The porridge was common, and is often considered the definitive peasant dish. It is made from roasted groats that are cooked with broth to a texture similar to rice or bulgur. The dish was taken to America by Jewish, Ukrainian, Russian, and Polish immigrants who called it kasha, and they mixed it with pasta or used it as a filling for cabbage rolls (stuffed cabbage), knishes, and blintzes; buckwheat prepared in this fashion is thus most commonly called kasha in America. Groats were the most widely used form of buckwheat worldwide during the 20th century, eaten primarily in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Poland, called grechka (Greek [grain]) in Belarusian, Ukrainian and Russian languages.

Buckwheat noodles have been eaten in Tibet and northern China for centuries, where the growing season is too short to raise wheat. A wooden press is used to press the dough into hot boiling water when making buckwheat noodles. Old presses found in Tibet and Shanxi share the same basic design features. The Japanese and Koreans may have learned the process of making buckwheat noodles from them.

Buckwheat noodles play a major role in the cuisines of Japan (soba)[39] and Korea (naengmyeon, makguksu and memil guksu). Soba noodles are the subject of deep cultural importance in Japan. The difficulty of making noodles from flour with no gluten has resulted in a traditional art developed around their manufacture by hand. A jelly called memilmuk in Korea is made from buckwheat starch.

Noodles also appear in Italy, with pasta di grano saraceno in Apulia region of Southern Italy and pizzoccheri in the Valtellina region of Northern Italy.

Buckwheat pancakes are eaten in several countries. They are known as buckwheat blini in Russia, galettes bretonnes in France, ployes in Acadia, poffertjes in the Netherlands, boûketes in the Wallonia region of Belgium, kuttu ki puri in India and kachhyamba in Nepal. Similar pancakes were a common food in American pioneer days.[40] They are light and foamy. The buckwheat flour gives the pancakes an earthy, mildly mushroom-like taste.

Yeasted patties called hrechanyky are made in Ukraine.

Buckwheat is a permitted sustenance during fasting in several traditions. In India, on Hindu fasting days (Navaratri, Ekadashi, Janmashtami, Maha Shivaratri, etc.), fasting people in northern states of India eat foods made of buckwheat flour. Eating cereals such as wheat or rice is prohibited during such fasting days. While strict Hindus do not even drink water during their fast, others give up cereals and salt and instead eat non-cereal foods such as buckwheat (kuttu). In the Russian Orthodox tradition, it is eaten on the St. Philip fast.[41]

Buckwheat honey is dark, strong and aromatic. Because it does not complement other honeys, it is normally produced as a monofloral honey.

Beverages edit

 
Black buckwheat tea (黑苦荞茶) produced in Sichuan Province, China

Beer edit

In recent years, buckwheat has been used as a substitute for other grains in gluten-free beer. Although it is not an actual cereal (being a pseudocereal), buckwheat can be used in the same way as barley to produce a malt that can form the basis of a mash that will brew a beer without gliadin or hordein (together gluten) and therefore can be suitable for coeliacs or others sensitive to certain glycoproteins.[42]

Whisky edit

Buckwheat whisky is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage made entirely or principally from buckwheat. It is produced in the Brittany region of France and in the United States.

Shōchū edit

Buckwheat shōchū (焼酎) is a Japanese distilled beverage produced since the 16th Century. The taste is milder than barley shōchū.[citation needed]

Tea edit

Buckwheat tea, known as kuqiao-cha (苦荞茶) in China, memil-cha (메밀차) in Korea and soba-cha (蕎麦茶) in Japan, is a tea made from roasted buckwheat.[43]

Upholstery filling edit

 
Buckwheat hulls

Buckwheat hulls are used as filling for a variety of upholstered goods, including pillows and zafu. The hulls are durable and do not insulate or reflect heat as much as synthetic filling. They are sometimes marketed as an alternative natural filling to feathers for those with allergies. However, medical studies to measure the health effects of pillows manufactured with unprocessed and uncleaned hulls concluded that such buckwheat pillows do contain higher levels of a potential allergen that may trigger asthma in susceptible individuals than do new synthetic-filled pillows.[44][45]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Fagopyrum esculentum (Buckwheat) at Wikimedia Commons

buckwheat, this, article, about, commonly, cultivated, crop, plant, other, uses, disambiguation, fagopyrum, esculentum, common, buckwheat, flowering, plant, knotweed, family, polygonaceae, cultivated, grain, like, seeds, cover, crop, name, buckwheat, used, sev. This article is about a commonly cultivated crop plant For other uses see Buckwheat disambiguation Buckwheat Fagopyrum esculentum or common buckwheat 2 3 is a flowering plant in the knotweed family Polygonaceae cultivated for its grain like seeds and as a cover crop The name buckwheat is used for several other species such as Fagopyrum tataricum a domesticated food plant raised in Asia BuckwheatScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsOrder CaryophyllalesFamily PolygonaceaeGenus FagopyrumSpecies F esculentumBinomial nameFagopyrum esculentumMoenchSynonyms 1 Polygonum fagopyrum L 1753 Fagopyrum cereale Raf Fagopyrum dryandrii Fenzl Fagopyrum emarginatum Roth Meisn 1840 Fagopyrum emarginatum Moench 1802 Fagopyrum fagopyrum L H Karst invalid tautonym Fagopyrum polygonum Macloskie Fagopyrum sagittatum Gilib Fagopyrum sarracenicum Dumort Fagopyrum vulgare Hill ex Druce 1913 Fagopyrum vulgare T Nees 1853 Polygonum emarginatum RothDespite its name buckwheat is not closely related to wheat It is not a cereal nor is it even a member of the grass family Buckwheat is related to sorrel knotweed and rhubarb and is known as a pseudocereal because its seeds culinary use is the same as cereals owing to their high starch content Contents 1 Etymology 2 Description 3 Distribution 4 History 5 Cultivation 6 Production 6 1 Biological control 7 Phytochemicals 7 1 Aromatic compounds 8 Nutrition 8 1 Gluten free 8 2 Potential adverse effects 9 Culinary use 10 Beverages 10 1 Beer 10 2 Whisky 10 3 Shōchu 10 4 Tea 11 Upholstery filling 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksEtymology editThe name buckwheat or beech wheat comes from its tetrahedral seeds which resemble the much larger seeds of the beech nut from the beech tree and the fact that it is used like wheat The word may be a translation of Middle Dutch boecweite boec beech Modern Dutch beuk see PIE bhago and weite wheat Mod Dut tarwe antiquated weit or maybe a native formation on the same model as the Dutch word 4 Description editBuckwheat is a herbaceous annual flowering plant growing to about 60 cm with red stems and pink and white flowers resembling those of knotweeds 5 68 The leaves are arrow shaped and the fruits are achenes about 5 7 mm with 3 prominent sharp angles 6 94 Distribution editFagopyrum esculentum is native to south central China and Tibet 7 and has been introduced into suitable climates across Eurasia Africa and the Americas 7 History edit nbsp Buckwheat illustration from the Japanese agricultural encyclopedia Seikei Zusetsu 1804 The wild ancestor of common buckwheat is F esculentum ssp ancestrale F homotropicum is interfertile with F esculentum and the wild forms have a common distribution in Yunnan a southwestern province of China The wild ancestor of tartary buckwheat is F tataricum ssp potanini 8 Common buckwheat was domesticated and first cultivated in inland Southeast Asia possibly around 6000 BCE and from there spread to Central Asia and Tibet and then to the Middle East and Europe which it reached by the 15th century 9 Domestication most likely took place in the western Yunnan region of China 10 The oldest remains found in China so far date to circa 2600 BCE while buckwheat pollen found in Japan dates from as early as 4000 BCE It is the world s highest elevation domesticate being cultivated in Yunnan on the edge of the Tibetan Plateau or on the plateau itself Buckwheat was one of the earliest crops introduced by Europeans to North America Dispersal around the globe was complete by 2006 when a variety developed in Canada was widely planted in China In India buckwheat flour is known as kuttu ka atta and has long been culturally associated with many festivals like Shivratri Navaratri and Janmashtami On the day of these festivals food items made only from buckwheat are consumed 11 Cultivation edit nbsp Buckwheat with flowers ripe and unripe seeds nbsp Exhibition of Flower Festival TaiwanBuckwheat is a short season crop that grows well in low fertility or acidic soils too much fertilizer especially nitrogen reduces yields and the soil must be well drained In hot climates buckwheat can be grown only by sowing late in the season so that it blooms in cooler weather The presence of pollinators greatly increases yield citation needed Nectar from flowering buckwheat produces a dark colored honey 12 The buckwheat plant has a branching root system with a primary taproot that reaches deeply into moist soil 13 It grows 75 to 125 centimetres 30 to 50 inches tall 14 Buckwheat has tetrahedral seeds and produces a flower that is usually white although can also be pink or yellow 15 Buckwheat branches freely as opposed to tillering or producing suckers enabling more complete adaption to its environment than other cereal crops 13 Buckwheat is only raised for grain where a brief time is available for growth either because the buckwheat is an early or a second crop in the season or because the total growing season is limited It establishes quickly which suppresses summer weeds and can be a reliable cover crop in summer to fit a small slot of warm season 14 Buckwheat has a growing period of only 10 12 weeks 16 and it can be grown in high latitude or northern areas 17 Buckwheat is sometimes used as a green manure as a plant for erosion control or as wildlife cover and feed 14 Production editIn 2021 world production of buckwheat was 1 9 million tonnes led by Russia with 49 of the world total followed by China with 27 and Ukraine with 6 18 Buckwheat production 2021 Country Production tonnes nbsp Russia 919 147 nbsp China 502 369 nbsp Ukraine 105 780 nbsp United States 82 359 nbsp Kazakhstan 78 049 nbsp Brazil 65 428Total 1 875 068Source FAOSTAT of the United Nations 18 Biological control edit F esculentum is often studied and used as a pollen and nectar source to increase natural predator numbers to control crop pests 19 Berndt et al 2002 found that the results were not entirely promising in one vineyard in New Zealand 20 21 22 but the same team Berndt et al 2006 four years later and studying a number of vineyards up and down New Zealand did find a significant increase in 22 parasitoids especially Dolichogenidea tasmanica 22 as did Irvin et al 1999 for D t in Canterbury orchards 23 Gurr et al 1998 showed that floral nectaries and not shelter in or alternate hosts on F esculentum were responsible for this increase and Stephens et al 1998 for Anacharis spp on Micromus tasmaniae Stephens et al 1998 also first demonstrated a great increase of A spp on M t which also commonly predates on F e 23 Cullen et al 2013 found that vineyards around Waipara had not continued planting buckwheat suggesting a need for further technique development so that buckwheat will integrate well with real world vineyard practice 22 English Loeb et al 2003 found that it does sustain greater numbers of Anagrus parasitoids on Erythroneura leafhoppers 22 and Balzan and Wackers 2013 found the same for Necremnus artynes and Ferracini et al 2012 for Necremnus tutae on Tuta absoluta and thereby act as pest controls in tomato potato and to a lesser degree other Solanaceous and non Solanaceous horticulturals 24 Kalinova and Moudry 2003 found that further companion planting with other flowers at the wrong time of year may actually cause F esculentum to be killed by frosts it would have otherwise survived and Colley and Luna 2000 found that it may delay its flowering to not coincide with the natural enemy it was planted to feed 19 Foti et al 2016 found significant short chain carboxylic acid variation to be the most likely explanation for biocontrol performance variation between cultivars 19 nbsp Field of buckwheat in Bumthang Bhutan nbsp Buckwheat field near Vrchovina in the Czech Republic nbsp Common buckwheat in flower nbsp Buckwheat flower in close up thrum nbsp Seed and withered flower of buckwheat nbsp Hulled buckwheat grainBuckwheatNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy1 435 kJ 343 kcal Carbohydrates71 5 gDietary fiber10 gFat3 4 gSaturated0 741 gMonounsaturated1 04 gPolyunsaturatedomega 3omega 61 039 g0 078 g0 961 gProtein13 25 gVitaminsQuantity DV Thiamine B1 9 0 101 mgRiboflavin B2 35 0 425 mgNiacin B3 47 7 02 mgPantothenic acid B5 25 1 233 mgVitamin B616 0 21 mgFolate B9 8 30 mgVitamin C0 0 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium2 18 mgCopper55 1 1 mgIron17 2 2 mgMagnesium65 231 mgManganese62 1 3 mgPhosphorus50 347 mgPotassium15 460 mgSelenium12 8 3 mgSodium0 1 mgZinc25 2 4 mgOther constituentsQuantityWater9 8 g Link to database entry Food Details USDA 170286 Units mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Phytochemicals editBuckwheat contains diverse phytochemicals including rutin tannins catechin 7 O glucoside in groats 25 26 and fagopyrins 27 28 29 which are located mainly in the cotyledons of the buckwheat plant 30 It has almost no levels of inorganic arsenic 31 Aromatic compounds edit Salicylaldehyde 2 hydroxybenzaldehyde was identified as a characteristic component of buckwheat aroma 32 2 5 dimethyl 4 hydroxy 3 2H furanone E E 2 4 decadienal phenylacetaldehyde 2 methoxy 4 vinylphenol E 2 nonenal decanal and hexanal also contribute to its aroma They all have odour activity value of more than 50 but the aroma of these substances in an isolated state does not resemble buckwheat 33 Nutrition editWith a 100 gram serving of dry buckwheat providing 1 440 kilojoules 343 kilocalories of food energy or 380 kJ 92 kcal cooked buckwheat is a rich source 20 or more of the Daily Value DV of protein dietary fiber four B vitamins and several dietary minerals with content especially high 47 to 65 DV in niacin magnesium manganese and phosphorus table Buckwheat is 72 carbohydrates 10 dietary fiber 3 fat 13 protein and 10 water Gluten free edit As buckwheat contains no gluten it may be eaten by people with gluten related disorders such as celiac disease non celiac gluten sensitivity or dermatitis herpetiformis 34 35 Nevertheless buckwheat products may have gluten contamination 34 Potential adverse effects edit Cases of severe allergic reactions to buckwheat and buckwheat containing products have been reported 36 Buckwheat contains fluorescent phototoxic fagopyrins 27 Seeds flour and teas are generally safe when consumed in normal amounts quantify but fagopyrism can appear in people with diets based on high consumption of buckwheat sprouts and particularly flowers or fagopyrin rich buckwheat extracts 37 Symptoms of fagopyrism in humans may include skin inflammation in sunlight exposed areas cold sensitivity and tingling or numbness in the hands 37 Culinary use editSee also List of buckwheat dishes This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Buckwheat flour nbsp Buckwheat left buckwheat flakes fast cooking right and crispbread made of buckwheat flour The fruit is an achene similar to sunflower seed with a single seed inside a hard outer hull The starchy endosperm is white and makes up most or all of buckwheat flour The seed coat is green or tan which darkens buckwheat flour The hull is dark brown or black and some may be included in buckwheat flour as dark specks The dark flour is known as ble noir black wheat in French along with the name sarrasin saracen Similarly in Italy it is known as grano saraceno saracen grain 38 The grain can be prepared by simple dehulling milling into farina to whole grain flour or to white flour The grain can be fractionated into starch germ and hull for specialized uses Buckwheat groats are commonly used in western Asia and eastern Europe The porridge was common and is often considered the definitive peasant dish It is made from roasted groats that are cooked with broth to a texture similar to rice or bulgur The dish was taken to America by Jewish Ukrainian Russian and Polish immigrants who called it kasha and they mixed it with pasta or used it as a filling for cabbage rolls stuffed cabbage knishes and blintzes buckwheat prepared in this fashion is thus most commonly called kasha in America Groats were the most widely used form of buckwheat worldwide during the 20th century eaten primarily in Estonia Latvia Lithuania Russia Ukraine Belarus and Poland called grechka Greek grain in Belarusian Ukrainian and Russian languages Buckwheat noodles have been eaten in Tibet and northern China for centuries where the growing season is too short to raise wheat A wooden press is used to press the dough into hot boiling water when making buckwheat noodles Old presses found in Tibet and Shanxi share the same basic design features The Japanese and Koreans may have learned the process of making buckwheat noodles from them Buckwheat noodles play a major role in the cuisines of Japan soba 39 and Korea naengmyeon makguksu and memil guksu Soba noodles are the subject of deep cultural importance in Japan The difficulty of making noodles from flour with no gluten has resulted in a traditional art developed around their manufacture by hand A jelly called memilmuk in Korea is made from buckwheat starch Noodles also appear in Italy with pasta di grano saraceno in Apulia region of Southern Italy and pizzoccheri in the Valtellina region of Northern Italy Buckwheat pancakes are eaten in several countries They are known as buckwheat blini in Russia galettes bretonnes in France ployes in Acadia poffertjes in the Netherlands bouketes in the Wallonia region of Belgium kuttu ki puri in India and kachhyamba in Nepal Similar pancakes were a common food in American pioneer days 40 They are light and foamy The buckwheat flour gives the pancakes an earthy mildly mushroom like taste Yeasted patties called hrechanyky are made in Ukraine Buckwheat is a permitted sustenance during fasting in several traditions In India on Hindu fasting days Navaratri Ekadashi Janmashtami Maha Shivaratri etc fasting people in northern states of India eat foods made of buckwheat flour Eating cereals such as wheat or rice is prohibited during such fasting days While strict Hindus do not even drink water during their fast others give up cereals and salt and instead eat non cereal foods such as buckwheat kuttu In the Russian Orthodox tradition it is eaten on the St Philip fast 41 Buckwheat honey is dark strong and aromatic Because it does not complement other honeys it is normally produced as a monofloral honey nbsp Soba noodles made from buckwheat flour nbsp Kuttu ke pakore a snack made from buckwheat flour India nbsp Buckwheat bread roti with potato curry and sour curd Sikkim India nbsp Grechka of Russia and Ukraine and BelarusBeverages edit nbsp Black buckwheat tea 黑苦荞茶 produced in Sichuan Province ChinaBeer edit In recent years buckwheat has been used as a substitute for other grains in gluten free beer Although it is not an actual cereal being a pseudocereal buckwheat can be used in the same way as barley to produce a malt that can form the basis of a mash that will brew a beer without gliadin or hordein together gluten and therefore can be suitable for coeliacs or others sensitive to certain glycoproteins 42 Whisky edit Main article Buckwheat whiskyBuckwheat whisky is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage made entirely or principally from buckwheat It is produced in the Brittany region of France and in the United States Shōchu edit Buckwheat shōchu 焼酎 is a Japanese distilled beverage produced since the 16th Century The taste is milder than barley shōchu citation needed Tea edit Buckwheat tea known as kuqiao cha 苦荞茶 in China memil cha 메밀차 in Korea and soba cha 蕎麦茶 in Japan is a tea made from roasted buckwheat 43 Upholstery filling edit nbsp Buckwheat hullsBuckwheat hulls are used as filling for a variety of upholstered goods including pillows and zafu The hulls are durable and do not insulate or reflect heat as much as synthetic filling They are sometimes marketed as an alternative natural filling to feathers for those with allergies However medical studies to measure the health effects of pillows manufactured with unprocessed and uncleaned hulls concluded that such buckwheat pillows do contain higher levels of a potential allergen that may trigger asthma in susceptible individuals than do new synthetic filled pillows 44 45 See also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Plants portal nbsp Agriculture portalList of buckwheat dishes Eriogonum Genus of North American wild buckwheatsReferences edit The Plant List A Working List of All Plant Species theplantlist org Archived from the original on 22 December 2019 Retrieved 3 October 2014 Wang Ya Nie Zihan Ma Tingjun 2022 02 24 The Effects of Plasma Activated Water Treatment on the Growth of Tartary Buckwheat Sprouts Frontiers in Nutrition 9 849615 doi 10 3389 fnut 2022 849615 ISSN 2296 861X PMC 8908094 PMID 35284468 USDA GRIN Taxonomy Retrieved 16 December 2014 Online Etymology Dictionary Etymonline com Retrieved 2013 11 24 Blamey M Fitter R Fitter A 2003 Wild flowers of Britain and Ireland The Complete Guide to the British and Irish Flora London A amp C Black ISBN 978 1408179505 Stace C A 2019 New Flora of the British Isles Fourth ed Middlewood Green Suffolk U K C amp M Floristics ISBN 978 1 5272 2630 2 a b Fagopyrum esculentum Moench Plants of the world online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 19 August 2022 Ohnishi O Matsuoka Y 1996 Search for the wild ancestor of buckwheat II Taxonomy of Fagopyrum Polygonaceae species based on morphology isozymes and cpDNA variability Genes and Genetic Systems 71 6 383 390 doi 10 1266 ggs 71 383 Weekly Ernest 1967 Buckwheat An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English Dover Publications p 211 Ohnishi O 1998 Search for the wild ancestor of buckwheat III The wild ancestor of cultivated common buckwheat and of tatary buckwheat Economic Botany 52 2 123 133 doi 10 1007 BF02861199 S2CID 22902898 Bhaduri Niti Pathak Prajneshu Meenakshi 2016 Kuttu Buckwheat A Promising Staple Food Grain for Our Diet Journal of Innovation for Inclusive Development 1 43 45 Archived from the original on 2018 10 18 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Pasini Federica Gardini Silvia Marcazzan Gian Luigi Caboni Maria Fiorenza 2013 Buckwheat honeys Screening of composition and properties Food Chemistry 141 3 2802 2811 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2013 05 102 PMID 23871027 a b Stone J L 1906 Buckwheat Agricultural experiment station of the College of Agriculture Department of Agronomy Report Bulletin Vol 238 Ithaca NY Cornell University pp 184 193 a b c Bjorkman T Bellinder R R Hahn R R amp Shail J 2008 Buckwheat Cover Crop Handbook Report Ithaca NY Cornell University Li S Zhang Q H 2001 Advances in the development of functional foods from buckwheat Food Science and Nutrition 41 6 451 464 doi 10 1080 20014091091887 PMID 11592684 S2CID 13049923 Growing Buckwheat Report Ottawa Canada Canadian Department of Agriculture 1978 Quisenberry K S Taylor J W 1939 Growing Buckwheat Report Farmers bulletin Vol 1835 Washington DC U S Department of Agriculture pp 1 17 a b Buckwheat production in 2021 Crops Regions World list Production Quantity pick lists UN Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database FAOSTAT 2023 Retrieved 29 July 2023 a b c Gurr Geoff M Wratten Steve D Landis Douglas A You Minsheng 31 January 2017 Habitat Management to Suppress Pest Populations Progress and Prospects Annual Review of Entomology Annual Reviews 62 1 91 109 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 031616 035050 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 27813664 Berndt Lisa A Wratten Steve D Hassan Paul G 2002 Effects of buckwheat flowers on leafroller Lepidoptera Tortricidae parasitoids in a New Zealand vineyard Agricultural and Forest Entomology Royal Entomological Society Royal Entomological Society Wiley 4 1 39 45 doi 10 1046 j 1461 9563 2002 00126 x S2CID 85231915 Suckling D M Brockerhoff E G 2010 Invasion Biology Ecology and Management of the Light Brown Apple Moth Tortricidae Annual Review of Entomology Annual Reviews 55 1 285 306 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 112408 085311 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 19728834 S2CID 36541192 a b c d Daane Kent M Vincent Charles Isaacs Rufus Ioriatti Claudio 7 January 2018 Entomological Opportunities and Challenges for Sustainable Viticulture in a Global Market Annual Review of Entomology Annual Reviews 63 1 193 214 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 010715 023547 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 29324036 a b Landis Douglas A Wratten Stephen D Gurr Geoff M 2000 Habitat Management to Conserve Natural Enemies of Arthropod Pests in Agriculture Annual Review of Entomology Annual Reviews 45 1 175 201 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 45 1 175 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 10761575 S2CID 6315523 Biondi Antonio Guedes Raul Narciso C Wan Fang Hao Desneux Nicolas 7 January 2018 Ecology Worldwide Spread and Management of the Invasive South American Tomato Pinworm Tuta absoluta Past Present and Future Annual Review of Entomology Annual Reviews 63 1 239 258 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 031616 034933 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 28977774 S2CID 207640103 Phenol Explorer Showing report on Cereals Phenol explorer eu Retrieved 24 November 2013 Kreft S Knapp M Kreft I November 1999 Extraction of rutin from buckwheat Fagopyrum esculentum Moench seeds and determination by capillary electrophoresis Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 47 11 4649 52 doi 10 1021 jf990186p PMID 10552865 a b Eguchi K Anase T Osuga H 2009 Development of a High Performance Liquid Chromatography Method to Determine the Fagopyrin Content of Tartary Buckwheat Fagopyrum tartaricum Gaertn and Common Buckwheat F esculentum Moench Plant Production Science 12 4 475 480 Bibcode 2009PlPrS 12 475E doi 10 1626 pps 12 475 Ozbolt L Kreft S Kreft I Germ M Stibilj V 2008 Distribution of selenium and phenolics in buckwheat plants grown from seeds soaked in Se solution and under different levels of UV B radiation Food Chemistry 110 3 691 6 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2008 02 073 Tavcar Benkovic E Zigon D Friedrich M Plavec J Kreft S 2014 Isolation analysis and structures of phototoxic fagopyrins from buckwheat Food Chemistry 143 432 439 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2013 07 118 PMID 24054263 Kreft S Janes D Kreft I 2013 The content of fagopyrin and polyphenols in common and tartary buckwheat sprouts Acta Pharmaceutica 63 4 553 60 doi 10 2478 acph 2013 0031 PMID 24451079 Yes There Is Arsenic In Your Rice Here s What You Need To Know HuffPost 14 February 2017 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Janes D Kreft S 2008 Salicylaldehyde is a characteristic aroma component of buckwheat groats Food Chemistry 109 2 293 8 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2007 12 032 PMID 26003350 Janes D Kantar D Kreft S Prosen H 1 January 2009 Identification of buckwheat Fagopyrum esculentum Moench aroma compounds with GC MS Food Chemistry 112 1 120 4 doi 10 1016 j foodchem 2008 05 048 a b Ciacci C Ciclitira P Hadjivassiliou M Kaukinen K Ludvigsson JF McGough N et al 2015 The gluten free diet and its current application in coeliac disease and dermatitis herpetiformis United European Gastroenterology Journal Review 3 2 121 35 doi 10 1177 2050640614559263 PMC 4406897 PMID 25922672 Eating Diet amp Nutrition for Celiac Disease National Institutes of Health June 2016 Wieslander G Norback D 2001 Buckwheat allergy Allergy Review 56 8 703 4 doi 10 1034 j 1398 9995 2001 056008703 x PMID 11488663 S2CID 29968598 a b Benkovic E T Kreft S 2015 Fagopyrins and Protofagopyrins Detection Analysis and Potential Phototoxicity in Buckwheat Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry Review 63 24 5715 24 doi 10 1021 acs jafc 5b01163 PMID 26024291 Grano Saraceno P S Belton John Reginald Nuttall Taylor 2002 Pseudocereals and Less Common Cereals grain properties and utilization potential Springer Publishing p 138 ISBN 978 3 540 42939 5 Sandra Louise Oliver 1 January 2005 Food in Colonial and Federal America Greenwood Publishing Group p 164 ISBN 978 0 313 32988 3 What to Eat During the Fast Orthodox Christianity com Retrieved 1 October 2021 Carolyn Smagalski 2006 Gluten Free Beer Festival glutenfreebeerfestival com Retrieved 1 October 2021 Kim Dakota 22 October 2015 10 Strange and Wonderful Korean Teas Paste Retrieved 27 January 2017 Chein Soo Hong Hae Sim Park amp Seung Heon Oh December 1987 Dermatophagoides Farinae an Important Allergenic Substance in Buckwheat Husk Pillows PDF Yonsei Medical Journal 28 4 274 281 doi 10 3349 ymj 1987 28 4 274 PMID 3439196 Hae Seon Nam Choon Sik Park Julian Crane Rob Siebers 2004 Endotoxin and House Dust Mite Allergen Levels on Synthetic and Buckwheat Pillows Journal of Korean Medical Science 19 4 505 8 doi 10 3346 jkms 2004 19 4 505 ISSN 1011 8934 PMC 2816881 PMID 15308838 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Buckwheat nbsp Media related to Fagopyrum esculentum Buckwheat at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buckwheat amp oldid 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