Production of Corn (Zea mays L.) in United States
Corn (Zea mays L.) or maize as it is known in Europe and other parts of the world, originated in the Western hemisphere. Although it is now grown around the world, production of field corn in the United States (270 million tones annually) exceeds that in any other country and is usually about equal to that of the rest of the world put together. Illinois and Iowa lead all other states, but Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota, Indiana and Ohio also have substantial crops, and some is grown in every state.
Field corn is entirely different as a food crop from the sweet corn (Zea mays var. rugosa) that is harvested immature in summer and cooked fresh on the cob or cut from the cob in food plants and preserved by canning or freezing for later consumer use as vegetable. Field corn is allowed to mature before harvest in the fall. It is shelled as a part of the harvesting operation and typically requires drying on the farm before storage or delivery to country elevator, grain terminal, or mill.
A very small part of the field corn syrup crop is of white corn varieties, used for the making the hominy grits and white cornmeal sold at retail in the United States, the grits being for use as a vegetable menu item or hot breakfast cereal, and the meal for making white corn bread and muffin. However, since corn is grown primarily for animal feed, for which the yellow varieties are preferred, availability and economics dictate that yellow corn must be the grain of choice for most food ingredient uses, including breakfast cereals.
The corn is dry-milled to separate the germ and bran from the endosperm, the larger particles of which go into the flaking grits, which are then cooked (with other ingredients), dried, tempered, flaked, and toasted. Progressively smaller endosperm particles form corn meal and corn flour, which can be used as ingredients in extruded corn or mixed cereal grain. The bran fraction, for many years used only in animal feed, and the germ press-cake, after extraction of its oil content, are now recovered and made available in an edible grade as a fiber ingredient for cereals and other food products.
Production of Corn (Zea mays L.) in United States