Supporting Good, Clean, and Fair Food

Prev | Next

Ark of Taste

White Sonora Wheat

White Sonora Wheat

a.k.a. Sonora soft winter wheat, Trigo Flor, Sonora Blanca (Spanish), ‘olas pilcañ (Pima)

White Sonora wheat is one of the oldest surviving wheat varieties anywhere in North America. Predating the Red Fife and Turkish Red wheat, White Sonora is a soft, round-grained winter wheat with pale red grains that grow on beardless heads. It is an early variety with 90 days to maturity when planted in the spring, but it also performs well as a winter wheat where freezing temperatures are not the norm.

Photo courtesy of Elizabeth Howe

The glutinous white flour makes stretchable dough suited to large tortillas, which were historically important for the development of burritos and chimichangas. Its wheat berries were used for pinole and posole. Its growing area is primarily associated with the bi-national Sonoran Desert and Mediterranean California climes.

The earliest records document its existence in the mountain plains of Sonora, Mexico in early 1700 but the wheat surely predates that era by generations. It was widely planted in California by the early 1800s. Up through the Civil War, this wheat variety provided most West Coast residents with their flour and during the war it nourished nearly all troops, on both sides, west of the Mississippi.

Sonora, along with Defiance and Austrialian wheats and landrace barley, comprised the majority of production by 1880 in California’s Central Valley, where 2,750,000 acres of wheat were grown, the largest wheat enterprise in history at that time, setting floor prices on the London International Wheat Exchange. Commercial production of Sonora wheat in the Central Valley was in decline by the 19th century, surviving into the 1950s but in much reduced area. Since then, it has not been used in commercial production anywhere on the continent.

White Sonora wheat was instrumental to the development of Borderlands cuisine, especially the large white flour tortillas that replaced corn tortillas in Mexico’s Northwest and the United State’s Southwest. White Sonora was widely used to make toasted and ground pinole and wheat berry-tepary bean stews, called posole, by Hispanic and Native and Anglo-Americans alike. Its sustainable dry-land production was even once responsible for making the Gila River Valley and Central Valley the breadbaskets of the West.

Norman Borlaug, a Nobel Prize-winning plant breeder, used White Sonora wheat as drought-adapted breeding material for the Sonora 64 variety, one of the first Green Revolution wheats. Unfortunately, development of Sonora 64 led to the commercial demise of White Sonora wheat between 1970 and 1980.

Photo courtesy of Native Seeds/SEARCH

Today, the White Sonora wheat tradition persists in a few rural areas of northern Sonora, southern Arizona, and central California. Current production is very limited, but the variety is being grown on a few farms in California and the Southwest. Native Seeds/SEARCH and Sabores Sin Fronteras Foodways Alliance are working together to make 10-pound bags of wheat berries available to artisan bakers and tortilla makers in an effort to characterize its baking and taste qualities. The San Xavier Cooperative Association Farm in Tucscon, AZ and the Tohono O’doham tribe’s gift store also sell wheat berries to locals.

Monica Spiller, founder of Whole Grain Connection, a non-profit that supplies hard-to-find seeds and information to farmers, is working to recover White Sonora wheat production in California. She has devoted much of the last three decades to studying and growing wheat varieties historically grown in the region. She noticed that the older varieties like White Sonora have certain advantages for small organic farms, such as being naturally tall, and thus able to shade out weeds and reduce the need for herbicides.

Early documentation indicates White Sonora wheat was among the most disease, drought tolerant and rust resistant varieties in the New World, with a record of quality production stretching from South America to the upper American Midwest. It was capable of producing an excellent crop with no irrigation and little fertility when compared with modern wheat. A Wisconsin farming journal from the 1870s details a Sonora harvest with a per-acre yield rivaling the best modern wheat. Although irrigation boosts Sonora yields, the wheat is remarkably drought tolerant and matures in areas where early, light rainfall and hot, dry climates are the norm—with no irrigation at all.

White Sonora wheat production works well in synergy with cattle husbandry and can be grazed at least twice per season and still produce a gorgeous food crop. When milled to whole grain flour it produces light-colored tortillas and yeasted breads with a lovely texture.

 

 

Sources

Whole Grain Connection
Secretary/Treasurer: Monica Spiller
PO Box 696
Los Altos, CA 94023-0696
650-938-2865
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
http://www.sustainablegrains.org
25-pound bags of seed available for farmers
Bulk wheat berries and flour available for bakers

Full Belly Farm
Judith Redman
PO Box 251
Guinda, CA
530-796-2214
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
http://www.fullbellyfarm.com
Flour and wheat berries sold at the Berkeley, CA farmers’ market on Tuesday, the Palo Alto, CA farmers’ market on Saturdays and the San Rafael, CA farmers’ market on Thursdays.

Suzanne Nelson
Native Seeds/SEARCH
526 N. Fourth Avenue
Tucson, AZ 85705
520-622-5561
http://www.nativeseeds.org
Small quantities of wheat berries available only. Call for details. Not currently available via the Native Seeds/SEARCH online store.

Anson Mills
1922 C Gervais Street
Columbia, SC 29201
646-379-1988
http://www.ansonmills.com
Custom wholesale flour orders only.


Find Producers on LocalHarvest

http://www.localharvest.org/ark-product.jsp?id=251

All Products

Click a category to view products

Beverages
Bread
Grains/Cereals
Cheeses
Fish & Shellfish
Fruits
Herbs & Spices
Meat & Poultry
Meat Products
Nuts
Prepared Foods
Pulses (beans, peas & lentils)
Vegetables
Wines & Vinegars
Other