SICILY: LAND OF WHEAT

In the Mediterranean civilization man and wheat, for about ten thousand years, have shared their  evolutionary path, since when man, having become a farmer, went from nomadic to sedentary and began  to cultivate, together with barley, monococcus spelt and, later, the dicocco spelt. In Sicily, there is some  information of wheat cultivations from archaeological finds dated 7300-6500 BC where carbonized straw  and kernels were found.

Even the sacred scriptures tell us about wheat, just think of the word “bet-leheni”  which means house of bread. The world of Romans and Greeks also spoke of wheat, the Greek goddess  Demeter had a daughter from Zeus, Persephora.

The young girl was kidnapped and it is said that Demeter,  for the joy of having found her daughter, made the wheat germinate. Demeter was adopted by the Romans  with the name Ceres (hence the term cereal). Sicily became a granary that the Greeks exploited after having  expelled the Sicilians.

Wheat has not only traced the history of man, but it has traced, and still traces today,  the landscape of our territory. All over the world and in all the magazines, Sicily is identified with a warm  colored landscape and bright yellow hills.

Wheat is also considered as a brand that identifies Sicily. Our  island is famous for the artistic itineraries from city to city, from town to town, but the predominant  landscape is undoubtedly the one shaped by the cultivation of wheat in the different areas of Sicily.  

THE GRAINS OF SICILY

Since ancient times, Sicily has been a land particularly linked to the cultivation of wheat, so much so that it  earned the title of “Granary of Rome” in ancient Rome.

The soil and climate in Sicily favor the growth of a  very rich variety of durum wheat and the natural drying of their spikes.

The scent of wheat in Sicily has  nuances that are difficult to find elsewhere: Sicilian wheat returns to fill the fields, to rebuild the  landscapes, to enrich the biodiversity that has always distinguished the island, with growing attention to  sustainable agriculture.  

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THE ANCIENT GRAINS OF SICILY

In the long evolutionary path of the Triticum genus and its domestication, Sicily has always been a  fundamental step for the passage of various wheats.

Wheat has found in the island the environmental  conditions to establish itself in over fifty well-defined local varieties, which tell fifty names, fifty stories, fifty  places and which still have a lot to reveal to that part of Italian consumers who are bringing them back to  table.

The lower quantity of gluten present in ancient Sicilian grains means that all the products obtained from them are lighter, more digestible and assimilable, with less probability of developing increasingly  widespread intolerances.

Finally, some native ancient grains are very resistant and grow spontaneously  without requiring an excessive use of fertilizers and pesticides. Ancient Sicilian grains are mostly  characterized by very high plant height (on average more than 150 cm), late ripening and low productivity  (they often produce less than half of modern varieties).

They have good nutritional and health value in  terms of high content in: fibers, proteins, antioxidants, vitamins and minerals and low or very low glycemic  and gluten index. Â