(Redirected from Grain amaranth)Amaranth has been cultivated as a grain for
8,000 years.
[1]
The yield of grain amaranth is comparable to
rice or
maize. It was a
staple food of the
Aztecs, and was used as an integral part of
Aztec religious ceremonies. Its
cultivation was banned by the
conquistadores in
1516. Because the plant has continued to grow as a
weed since that time, its
genetic base has been largely maintained. Research on grain amaranth began in the
US in the
1970s. By the end of the
1970s, a few thousand acres were being cultivated.
[2] Much of the grain currently grown is sold in
health food shops.
Grain amaranth is also grown as a food crop in limited amounts in
Mexico, where it is used to make a
candy called
alegría (
Spanish: "happiness") at
festival times. The grains are popped, and mixed with honey.
Amaranth grain can also be used to extract
amaranth oil - a particularly valued
pressed seed oil with many commercial uses.
Nutritional analysis
As the following table shows, grain amaranth is particularly nutritious.
[3]
Notable nutritional attributes of amaranth grain include:-
★ The
protein, which is of an unusually high quality, according to ECHO.
★ A ¼ cup of amaranth grain supplies 60% of the
Recommended Dietary Allowance of
iron.
[4]
★ Amaranth grain is free of
gluten, which is important for people with gluten allergies.
References
1. Amaranth: Grain & Vegetable Types G. Kelly O'Brien and Martin L. Price
2. Grain Amaranth: A Lost Crop of the Incas Thomas Jefferson Agricultural Institute (PDF version also available)
3. Amaranth: from the Past, for the Future, J.N. Cole, , , Rodale Press, Emmaus, PA, 1979,
4. Certified Organic Amaranth Typical Quality Analysis