Miscellaneous
Food Crops
Miscellaneous food crops (Crop Group 20) include 20 diverse unique crops
including asparagus, grapes, okra, strawberries and sunflowers. Descriptions
of the acreage and values of these crop types are shown in Table 19.
A
perennial succulent grown from vegetative parts ("pups") lasting
four to seven years producing juice for cosmetic, juice and pulp uses, or
for healing wounds. Three to five basal leaves are hand harvested every
six to eight weeks. New apical leaves continue to emerge. The fleshy, pulpy
leaves are crushed, pressed to extrude juice or aloe gel, placed in barrels,
and hauled to buying points; later juice is concentrated, pasteurized, and/or
freeze-dried. Aloe is used in beverages, cosmetics, herbal products, and
other uses in a rapidly growing market. Production ranges from small plantings
of individual families (as a cottage industry) to commercial fields of 200
acres or more in the U.S. Aloe is also imported from Mexico and Central
America. Insect pests include mealybug. Weeds include annual and perennial
weeds. Diseases include Phytophthora and Pythium root rot, Erwinia soft
rot, and some slime molds.
Seed of improved selections
are sown to produce a high protein seed grain crop. Commercial amaranth
grows 5 to 7 feet and is harvested after frost. Sometimes 2,000 to 4,000
acres planted in Great Plains; at least 100
acres in Texas. Some yard plantings for edible amaranth foliage.
Some commercial production in Zavalla
County near Crystal City and roadside sales near Bonham, from sandy soils.
Insect pests include asparagus beetle, a nd
aphids. Weeds include annual broadleaf weeds. Diseases include Fusarium
crown rot and Cercospora leafspot.
Rape seed produced for oil production
is not a commercial crop in Texas. Some breeding in Kansas indicates some
livestock forage potential. Commercial production common in northern plains
states and prairie provinces of Canada.
More than 100,000 acres
of corn grown in Texas for
snack and staple foods processing including extruded products (chips), ethnic
baked goods, tortillas, corn flakes, meal and other products. Food-grade
corn is 80% white types and is produced under contract with irrigation and
close adherence to pest management, mycotoxin avoidance, and quality assurance.
Key production areas are Winter Garden/Uvalde area and High Plains. Pests
include corn earworm, annual weeds, molds, and head diseases similar to
corn grown for grain.
Production irrigated to assure good
yields and consumer quality. Harvested with a special combine with smaller
screens and modified cylinder bars to avoid kernel damage. Hard starch absorbs
moisture with a 40-fold expansion when heated; kernels invert to make a
snack food. Production is similar to field corn but with more pest scouting
and treatment to avoid corn earworm damage. Pest problems similar to those
of field corn. Quality assurance includes close adherence to pesticide labels.
High sugar content at soft
dough stage distinguishes it from field corn. Commercial production for
processing as canned or frozen product. Grown in small plots for fresh product;
local sales in East Texas. Some shipped to area grocery stores in August
and September. Both white and yellow types. Most common pests include fall
armyworm, corn earworm, summer annual weeds, and foliar diseases. Other
pests are similar to field corn.
Low growing, highly branched shrub-like
tree in southern part of state. Easy to grow and a common backyard crop.
Subject to freeze kill but usually regrows. Soft pear-shaped fruit has rough
texture but tender
exterior and a delicious rose-colored flesh, great for fresh use or jams.
Types include “wild turkey” (a land race) and “Alma”.
Grasshoppers love the foliage and fruit in some years. Diseases include
root rot nematodes, rust, and fruit rots.
Production in small plantings
for local, self-pick or retail sales. Pests similar to wine grapes.
The early history
of grapes in Texas goes back three centuries to when early Spanish missionaries
brought favorite selections (“Mission”) from Mexico and set
up mission outposts. Major expansion occurred in the past three decades,
as grapes moved from a backyard crop to a major industry.
Today wine grapes are produced in: Far West Texas/Ft. Stockton (1,000 acres),
High Plains (1,000 acres), Hill County/Fredericksburg (500 acres), North
Central Texas/Stephenville (500 acres). Industry employs about 2,300 workers
and generates over $100 million economic impact. Texas ranks fifth in U.S.
wine production and over 95% of the production is marketed within the state.
Insect pests includes the glassy-winged sharpshooter. A host of diseases
including Pierce’s disease, black rot, downy and powdery mildews,
cotton root rot, and virus complex.
A common backyard and roadside market
crop in East Texas, and grown commercially in LRGV and WG for freezer plants
Some production is imported from Mexico. Insects pests include white fly
and fire ants. Diseases include soil borne wilts, root and crown rots, nematodes,
leaf spot, and cotton root rot.
The drought-tolerant evergreen olive
tree is native to the Mediterranean. Texas has small plantings in Hays County
and southward into the Hill Country. Production mostly for novelty fruit
and oil production. Makes a nice ornamental planting in southern areas.
Several pests, including xylella - bacterial leaf scorch.
Cactus infests over 100,000 acres of range and pastureland in Texas but
produces a pear-like fruit that may be eaten fresh or processed. Most cactus
lines have thorns but some are thornless. Plant parts are harvested (carefully)
by hand or processed. The cladophylls or pads are processed for an ethnic
food with a flavor similar to watermelon, with a seedy, moist flesh. Pads
may be sliced or chopped for salads or cooked like snap beans. "Nopalitos"
are green pads shredded in a French green bean style and canned, with a
tangy green bean taste. The "pearfruit" is also harvested after
the cactus has bloomed and the fruit has turned colors (usually yellow to
red). "Pears" are rolled in sand to remove spines, blanched, and
cooked into a preserve, jelly, or salsa-like material. No known economic
pests. “Pear” is an important reserve forage and in times of
severe drought ranchers burn off the spines so livestock can forage on the
pads.
This summer annual produces seed
in 120 to 150 days; primarily raised for vegetable oil and residual meal
for livestock. Head and seeds sometimes used as a spice. Periodically grown
in Texas.
Acreage varies with federal farm program
and weather. Planted as a “catch crop” after storm-damaged cotton.
Planted in the Winter Garden/Uvalde area, extending northward into the Rolling
Plains/Vernon area. Contract production extends into southwest Oklahoma
and southern Kansas. Since sesame is a poor competitor as a seedling, soil-applied
herbicides are essential. Seed pods shatter easily and some foliar and pod
diseases reduce yields. Also planted in wildlife food plots for doves (see
Non-food crops - Wildlife). Check out the awesome crop profile on this unique
crop and its history.
Produced under irrigation south of San Antonio for roadside, local markets,
or self-pick. In East Texas, crop produced under plastic row covers promotes
early spring crop and protects blossoms. Harvested April to June. Insect
pests include slugs, fire ants, flea beetles, and birds. Weeds include annual
weeds. Diseases include Cercospora leaf spot, red stele, anthracnose, virus
complex, and Verticillium wilt.
Grown in three counties in the LRGV
with three to six years of production
from the ratoon or stubble. Products include sucrose, molasses, and bagasse
(the residual fiber usually burned for steam generation and electricity
to operate the mill). Insect pests include borers but biological control
suppresses them. Weeds include sunflower, pigweed, guineagrass, johnsongrass,
nutsedge, bermudagrass, morningglory, and winter annual broadleafs. 100%
of the crop is sprayed. Diseases include ratoon stunting disease, leaf scald,
rust, smut, yellow leaf syndrome but no fungicides are applied. See pests
and pesticides in U.S. sugarcane, crop profile or brief for full details.
Seed produced in the High Plains; has good color and high oil content; meal
is used for livestock feed. Crop has both cold and drought tolerance and
adversity resistance (hail, wind, sand abrasion) yet is not highly profitable
since returns are tied to world vegetable oil prices. Texas usually grows
17,000 to 20,000 acres for oil and 40,000 to 46,000 acres for confectionery
use (60%) and bird seed (40%). Yields average 1,400 pounds per acre. Insect
pests include sunflower head moth and seed weevil. Diseases include downy
and powdery mildew, Rhizopus head rot, cotton root rot, and Sclerotinia
wilt. Clearfield herbicide-resistant hybrids make weed control easier. Weeds
are similar to those in soybeans and grain sorghum.
High-sugar sorghum lines are
crushed to extract juice which is then boiled and evaporated to produce
cane syrup or molasses. Mostly grown east of I-45 in Texas on less than
10 acre tracts. Majority of U.S. production is in TN and KY. Pest problems
similar to those of grain sorghum. Insect pests include aphids/greenbugs.
Weeds include annual weeds. Diseases include downy mildew, maize dwarf mosaic
virus, smut, anthracnose, rust, charcoal rot, bacterial spot and stripe. |