History
Most cultivated varieties of sorghum can be traced back to Africa, where they grow on savanna lands. During the Muslim Agricultural Revolution, sorghum was planted extensively in parts of the Middle East, North Africa and Europe. The name "sorghum" comes from Italian "sorgo", in turn from Latin "Syricum (granum)" meaning "grain of Syria". [1]
Tenth century records indicate that it was widely grown in Iraq, and became the principal food of Kirman in Persia. In addition to the eastern parts of the Muslim world, the crop was also grown in Egypt and later in Islamic Spain. From Islamic Spain it was introduced to Christian Spain and then France (by the twelfth century). In the Muslim world, sorghum was grown usually in areas where the soil was poor or the weather too hot and dry to grow other crops. [1]
Other Ingredient Information
Products containing Sorghum
The percentage represents the approximate total number of food products from UPC Food Search's data that contain the ingredient, "Sorghum".
The data is calculated from UPC Food Search's product data only, and is not meant to reflect all food products regionally or globally.
Source(s) Derived From |
Plant Sources |
Natural or Artificial? |
Natural |
References |
- Sorghum - Wikipedia
|
Aliases (Also Known As)
|
Grain Sorghum Sorghum Grain Meal Sprouted Sorghum Sweet White Sorghum Whole Grain Sorghum
Color Key - (Click/Tap to View)
- Natural
- Natural & Possibly Unsafe
- Artificial
- Artificial & Possibly Unsafe
- Both (Can be derived from Natural & Artificial Sources)
- Both (Can be derived from Natural & Artificial Sources) & Possibly Unsafe
|
Revision History
Action |
User |
Date/Time |
Ingredient added | UPC Food Search | January 1, 2009 @ 2:14 AM |
Comments