That yellow corn was too good to be true I myself did not see as an A student at the University of the Philippines College of Agriculture in 1959!
(upper image from Facebook[1] Isabela Dry Monitoring Yellow Corn,
lower image[2] from Britannica)
1st Year, in an animal husbandry class (I forget
the exact title), we learned that yellow corn was a major ingredient of poultry
feed; a great many years later, yellow corn became expensive,
60+
years later, why have UP Los Baños animal husbandry professors not done
research on a feed substitute for
yellow corn?
2 reasons I can think of right now are:
(1) The professors did not do much animal research.
(2) The professors did not think in terms of feed substitutes.
Not surprisingly, birds and pigs and humans love yellow corn
because of its bright color and sweet taste. Of yellow corn[3], ANN says (Author Not Named, undated, Specialty
Produce):
The less sweet corn is
cooked, the better the flavor and texture. Yellow corn can be roasted, grilled,
blanched, steamed, or pureed. Its bright and sweet flavors lend well to pastas
and salads. It pairs well with tomatoes, basil cilantro, lobster, pork, (chilis),
truffles, shelling beans, cream, nutty cheeses, peas, summer squashes, fennel,
citrus and scallops. Yellow corn is dried and ground into flour for baked
goods, tortillas, cereals and used as a crust/crisping agent for dishes both
savory and sweet. Corn is also used for oil, as a sweetener in foods and beverages
and as a base for beverage alcohol.
Countless
uses as is or ground into flour – How economically important is yellow corn!
Yellow
corn is the farm crop that UP Los Baños ignored!
I
now consider it a failure of my alma mater, UP Los Baños, in research for
development (R4D): The search for an alternative for yellow corn as feed for
poultry & livestock – aside from humans.
Here comes the Department of Agriculture (DA) doing
something concrete about costs of yellow corn: “DA Reviews Tariff Cut For
Yellow Corn[4]” (Catherine Talavera, 01 August
2021, The Philippine Star):
The Department of
Agriculture (DA) has created a technical working group (TWG) to study possible
reforms in the tariffs of imported yellow corn in a bid to provide a lower and
steady supply of the commodity to farmers who use it for animal feeds.
Secretary of Agriculture William
Dar creating a TWG means the DA sees imported yellow corn is vital to
the health of PH Agriculture: Cost must go down and supply must be stable. We
feed on the animals that feed on the corn.
Yellow corn has
strategic importance in the livestock, poultry and fishery sectors since it is
the major animal feed ingredient. It is estimated that feeds constitute
approximately 60 to 70 percent of the total operating production costs.
I
go back to my dear old alma mater: “Why has UP Los Baños failed in those
100-years-plus to do research for development in yellow corn?!”@517
[1]https://www.facebook.com/Isabela-dry-yellow-corn-monitoring-farmers-choice-2204164049828109/
[2]https://www.britannica.com/plant/corn-plant
[3]https://www.freshproduce.com.ph/veggies/166-patola.html#:~:text=Yellow%20corn%20can%20be%20roasted,%2C%20fennel%2C%20citrus%20and%20scallops.
[4]https://www.philstar.com/business/2021/08/01/2116643/da-reviews-tariff-cut-yellow-corn
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