USA
Rice Domestic Promotion Delivers During Lockdown
By Cameron
Jacobs
ARLINGTON, VA
-- With the majority of the country on lockdown over the last three months and
schools and restaurants essentially closed, USA Rice has adapted domestic
promotion programming to meet the needs of the changing foodservice and
consumer landscapes. The new reality of
a much smaller foodservice footprint and a more engaged consumer audience has
shifted focus to the at-home consumer.
"With
dining out no longer an option for most, Americans are cooking more for
themselves," said Robbie Trahan, a Louisiana rice miller and chair of the
USA Rice Domestic Promotion Committee.
"We've shifted our focus to providing these home cooks with what
they need to make use of all the U.S.-grown rice they are stocking up on --
recipes, tips, and inspiration."
Trahan said
that while total restaurant sales may have been off by as much as 70 percent in
April, nationally rice retail sales are up 33 percent for March 2020 as
compared to March 2019, with some retailers reporting a 60 percent increase in
total rice sales for those times. USA
Rice promotions are responding appropriately.
James
Beard-nominated chef and USA Rice foodservice consultant Hari Cameron, fresh
off the debut of a series of inspirational rice cooking videos aimed at
foodservice operators has also expanded his focus, appearing on local morning
news programs to offer quarantine cooking tips that include rice dishes.
USA Rice social
media campaigns have increased over the past three months with double the posts
keeping followers supplied with nine new rice recipes: Chicken Green Onion Fried Rice being the
overwhelming favorite! Regular USA Rice
influencer and blogger programs hosted by TheFeedFeed and affiliated registered
dietitians generated the new content to keep U.S.-grown rice top of mind for
home cooks who are creating dishes using minimal ingredients and pantry
staples.
In March and
April, USA Rice distributed two new consumer newsletters packed with recipes, student
activities, and other consumer resources including the online ThinkRice
consumer recipe database. USA Rice also
distributed a school nutrition newsletter in April to a network of school
foodservice professionals offering support, inexpensive to-go recipes for
schools, and directing readers back to USA Rice online foodservice offerings.
"In no way
are we abandoning foodservice," said Michael Klein USA Rice vice president
of domestic promotion. "We are
encouraging consumers to get take-out, curbside service, or purchase gift
certificates from their favorite restaurants to help those businesses weather
this storm. Foodservice is going to come
roaring back, but we suspect things will look a little different. We're working now to adapt our programs going
forward to help restaurants stay profitable, keep customers and employees safe,
and menu U.S.-grown rice."
"Nobody is
certain what the future holds for any of us, but whether it's fine dining,
quick casual, take-out, or a home cooked meal, U.S. rice can and should be a
part of it, and we're going to do our best to make that happen," Trahan
concluded.
ARS and university researchers
are on the hunt for rice traits that can help the grain crop better cope with
reduced water use or shortages.
Preparing U.S. Rice for a Parched
Future
By Jan Suszkiw
May 7, 2020
May 7, 2020
Like people, some plants handle
stress better than others.
Now, in a recent issue of Agronomy,
a team of Agricultural Research Service (ARS) and university scientists report their
identification of U.S. rice varieties with the right "genetic" stuff
for coping with reduced water use.
Their efforts dovetail with a
trend toward water-saving measures that some growers are implementing in not
only Arkansas, which produces half the U.S. rice crop, but also other major
rice-growing states, namely Mississippi, Missouri, Louisiana, Texas and
California.
Rice is traditionally grown in
leveed sections of fields called paddies that can be flooded with water pumped
in from rivers, alluvial aquifers, on-farm reservoirs and other sources. Such
flooding helps control weeds and ensures the rice crop can attain its maximum
yield potential.
However, a number of factors have
contributed to growers' increasing interest in alternatives to flooding,
including competition for water from other sectors of society such as
municipalities and the effects of global climate change such as erratic
rainfall, according to two of the Agronomy journal authors, Jai Rohila and Anna McClung, both with ARS' Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center in
Stuttgart, Arkansas. Their co-authors on the paper are Christopher Henry with
the University of Arkansas and Argelia Lorence with Arkansas State University.
"Reducing water use, which
is currently about 30 inches per acre over the season for Arkansas-grown rice,
is a necessary step toward sustainable production of rice and food
security," added Rohila, an agronomist. "About 80 percent of the
irrigation water for the Arkansas rice crop is pumped from the Mississippi
River Valley alluvial aquifer."
Over the past four decades,
however, the aquifer's water levels have dropped at the rate of 12 to 18 inches
per year, Rohila added. Alternate wetting and drying, furrow irrigation, land
leveling, tailwater recovery and multiple-inlet irrigation are some of the
strategies that growers are investigating or already using to conserve water,
in some cases by 20 percent.
There's been a genetic hitch,
though, that can lead to grain yield reductions under such measures.
"All current rice varieties
in the United States were essentially developed for production under continuous
flood irrigation management systems," explained McClung, a supervisory
geneticist who directs the ARS center. "We conducted this research to
determine what are the traits and genetic resources that can be used to develop
new rice cultivars that will have high grain quality and yield under reduced
irrigation inputs."
Toward that end, the team
designed a series of field experiments in which they subjected 15 different
rice cultivars (conventional medium- and long-grain varieties as well as
specialty rice) to sub-surface drip irrigation regimens based on one of four
soil-moisture scenarios, or "volumetric water contents" (VWCs).
The first scenario was comparable
to conventionally flooded field conditions with a VWC of 30 percent. The fourth
mimicked a severe water-deficit scenario (VWC 14 percent) capable of triggering
catastrophic wilting from which the rice crop can't recover. In between these
extremes were two moderate water-deficit scenarios with VWCs of 24 and 20
percent. "This gradient of soil moisture regimes in our study allowed us
to assess how well the varieties can respond to varying degrees of water
deficit," Rohila explained.
Among the results, the
researchers reported that:
- Of 10
total traits (e.g., plant height, flowering time/duration, and
"grainfill") they examined, six traits accounted for 35 percent
of the variability in the varieties' physiological responses to water
stress, including their ability to produce grain.
- Plant
height was generally greatest in the first soil-moisture scenario
(mimicking flooded fields), except for five of the varieties tested. Grain
yields were also highest in the first scenario, except for seven
varieties, which performed better in scenarios two and three.
- Unexpectedly,
varieties with higher leaf canopy temperatures tended to produce the most
grain under water-stress conditions.
- Those same varieties also had genetic
origins in tropical or subtropical regions of the world, where heat stress
conditions are common, another form of physiological stress.
One top contender that performed
well under water-stress conditions is a tropical japonica-type rice from the
Philippines known as PI 312777. Other top performers were Francis and Mars from
the United States and Zhe 733 from China. Among the cultivars tested, 10 have
been used to develop populations of offspring displaying different
stress-coping traits that can be used with genomic mapping techniques. This, in
turn, can help identify the genes that control these traits and potentially use
them in rice breeding and improvement programs.
McClung said they aim to provide
rice breeders with DNA markers associated with the genes and alleles (alternate
copies) for these traits so that they can be passed into elite rice varieties
more quickly, efficiently and with less cost.
The researchers indicate that
this is the first step in adapting rice varieties to production systems that
use a minimum amount of irrigation, a pursuit that will become increasingly
relevant as the world's population soars to nearly 10 billion individuals by
2050 amid finite arable land, water and other natural resources.
"We understand our vision is
ambitious," Rohila said. "but the goal is to have both food and
natural resource (water) security for society and our future generations."
The Agricultural
Research Service is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief
scientific in-house research agency. Daily, ARS focuses on solutions to
agricultural problems affecting America. Each dollar invested in agricultural
research results in $20 of economic impact.
https://www.ars.usda.gov/news-events/news/research-news/2020/preparing-us-rice-for-a-parched-future/
Lahore Chamber Of Commerce And
Industry Congrats Chela Ram On Becoming Chairman Minorities Commission
The Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) on Wednesday
congratulated Chela Ram Kewlani on becoming Chairman Minorities Commission
LAHORE, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan
Point News - 6th May, 2020 ) :The Lahore Chamber
of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) on Wednesday congratulated
Chela Ram Kewlani on becoming Chairman Minorities Commission.
According to spokesperson, LCCI President Irfan Iqbal
Sheikh, Senior Vice President and Vice President thanked Prime
Minister Imran Khan for appointing
leading Rice Exporter of Pakistan Mr
Chela Ram Kewlani as Chairman of MinoritiesCommission of Pakistan.
They hoped that Chela Ram would play a vital role in bridging
interfaith harmony.
India stops
14,000 cusecs of water flowing into Pakistan
India has stopped 14,000 cusecs of
water flowing into Pakistan via River Chenab, officials at the Pakistani
Ministry of Water Resources said Wednesday.
The flow of water in Chenab has
been reduced to 18,000 cusecs, the officials said. It was at 31,800 cusecs on
Tuesday.
Due to this, the rice crop is
feared to be affected in areas stretching from Marala to Panjnad headworks in
Punjab.
India has diverted this water to
Baglihar and Ratle dams, the officials added.
Drought
tolerance of rice: research and recent advancements
The crop of rice is affected by
drought tolerance (below-average precipitation) in the areas where water
shortage exists. But rice can bear the drought and can tolerate it.
Rice (Oryza sativa) is used as a staple food
by billions of people around the world. Probably the oldest domestic grain
(~10,000 years. Pakistan is the world’s 11th largest
producer of rice. Pakistan’s export makes up 8% of the world’s total rice
trade. In the year 2016-17, Pakistan produced 6.7 million tons of rice.
In the last few decades, the researchers have worked on the
drought and have given the possible ways of drought tolerance. Drought-tolerant
varieties have been introduced by International Rice Research Institute
(IRRI) in several countries and are now being planted by farmers.
(IRRI) in several countries and are now being planted by farmers.
Sahbhagi dhan in India, 5411
variety in the Philippine’s, sookha dhan variety by Nepal, BRRI dhan variety by
Bangladesh has been introduced. Drought Degree Tolerance (DTD) is a new
introduces technique in which the mean of the ratios of green leafs length to
the total leaf of top three leaves in every rice seedling is taken after
drought treatment.
This is an effective technique but it is avoided in drought
tolerance of upland rice at late growth stages. Direct Seeded Rice is a
technique in which rice seed is sown and sprouted directly in the field
reducing the crop’s water requirement. Improving the photosynthesis in rice by
inserting the c4 pathway is the latest drought tolerance
technique.
In c3 plants like rice, CO2 is
assimilated into a 3-carbon compound by the photosynthetic enzyme ribolose1-5,
bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase (Rubisco). At temperature above 30°C which
is typical of rice-growing areas of the world rate of oxygenation increases
substantially and this reduces the photosynthetic efficiency of C3 plans by up
to 40%.
Thus photosynthesis of rice in the tropics and warm temperate regions
becomes inefficient. The C4 plants which have CO2 concentration
mechanism within their leaves have very much reduced level of photorespiration.
Rice with a photosynthetic mechanism would have increased photosynthetic
efficiency while using scarce resources such as land water and fertilizer
specifically nitrogen more effectively.
Rice
crop likely to be affected after India stops water flow
BY NEWS
DESK
India has stopped 14,000 cusecs
of water flowing into Pakistan via River Chenab, the Pakistani Ministry of
Water Resources said on Wednesday, fearing the reduced water flow could damage
the rice crop.
The flow of water in Chenab has
been reduced to 18,000 cusecs, the officials said. It was at 31,800 cusecs on
Tuesday.
Due to this, the rice crop is
feared to be affected in areas stretching from Marala to Panjnad headworks in
Punjab.
India has diverted this water to
Baglihar and Ratle dams
Govt procuring Boro paddy at Tk 26 per kg
DHAKA
·
PUBLISH- MAY 07, 2020,
05:09 PM
·
UNB NEWS - UNB NEWS
·
278 VIEWS
·
UPDATE- MAY 07, 2020, 09:05
PM
The government has started
procurement of paddy directly from farmers at Tk 26 per kg.
Boiled rice is being bought at the
rate of Tk 36 and ‘Atap rice’ at Tk 35 per kg from the millers.
Food Minister Sadhan Chandra
Majumder inaugurated the programme through a video conference this afternoon
attended by senior officials of Naogaon district administration, district food
department officials and mill owners.
The minister said more paddy and
rice would be procured than the target as there's enough space at government
warehouses.
He called upon the farmers and
millers to cooperate in this regard.
At the same time, the officials and
staff were instructed to expedite the stocks by collecting paddy rice following
hygiene rules.
The government will procure eight
lakh metric tonnes of paddy during the current Boro season directly from
farmers and 11.5 lakh metric tonnes of rice (boiled and non-boiled) from
millers.
Besides, some 75,000 metric tonnes
of wheat will be procured from the local markets in the season.
During the campaign, farmers will
be able to go directly to the warehouse and sell paddy and wheat. Millers have
contacted the food department to procure rice. The food minister instructed the
officials and employees to keep a watchful eye so that the farmers do not face
any kind of harassment while giving paddy to the warehouse.
Farmers, watch out for viruses infecting the rice plant
Viruses are fatal as
they may claim lives when infected. Did you know that rice plants can also be
infected with viruses? Yes, and they can result in significant yield losses
when not properly managed. Worst, rice plants infected by some of these viruses
are not treatable.
Dr. Jennifer T. Niones,
plant pathology expert of the Philippine Rice Research Institute of the
Department of Agriculture (DA-PhilRice), said that there are four types of
viruses, which farmers must be aware of to minimize farm threats. These viruses
include tungro, dwarf, grassy stunt, and ragged stunt.
Tungro
Tungro virus is an
extremely damaging rice disease in South and Southeast Asia bringing in 70-100%
yield loss. Rice tungro bacilliform virus (RTBV) and rice tungro spherical
virus (RTSV) cause this disease.
RTBV symptoms include
mild stunting and mild yellowing, while RTSV -infected plants are quite
stunted. Rice plants with both RTBV and RTSV display mottled and yellow to
orange leaves, and severe stunting. Rice plants infected during early growth
stages will not produce panicles. If attacked in later stages, panicles may
develop but with low grain fill.
Niones said tungro is
transmitted by six leafhopper species with the rice green leafhopper (GLH) as
the most important carrier. GLH, which is usually abundant in irrigated rice
fields, transmits the virus more efficiently than other vectors.
“After feeding on an
infected plant for 30min, GLH can immediately transmit the virus to a healthy
plant. Leafhoppers transmit RTSV and RTBV for approximately 4 and 7 days,
respectively,” Niones said.
As infected plants
cannot be treated, farmers must consider preventive measures especially if
their area had past incidences of tungro infestation.
The crop management
expert recommended tungro-resistant varieties such as NSIC Rc 118 and Rc 120.
Synchronous planting is also encouraged as this practice reduces the food
sources available for insect pests to survive on and multiply. Farmers may also
schedule their planting when GLH population is at its lowest.
“Farmers must not also
spray in seedbed when no tungro and few GLH are present. Insecticides should
not be used repeatedly over long periods to maintain the population of viruses’
natural enemies and preserve the natural balance of insect populations,” she
said.
For previously infected
fields, farmers must immediately plow the stubbles after harvest to destroy the
eggs and breeding sites of GLH.
Dwarf
virus
First observed in the
rice fields of Midsayap, Cotabato, rice dwarf virus (RDV) reduces yield by
50-80%, especially when it strikes down at vegetative stage. Infected plants
show pronounced stunting, increased tillering, and shortened darker green
leaves with fine chlorotic specks.
Infected plants usually
survive until harvest time but rarely produce panicles. Panicles are usually of
poor quality, and grains are unfilled. When damaged during seeding stage, rice
plants do not produce grains.
RDV spread can be
prevented through plowing of the fallowed rice field and synchronous planting.
Applying insecticide to rice seedlings before transplanting can also be an
option. Areas infected during the previous cropping season should be
immediately plowed.
Grassy
stunt virus
Rice grassy stunt virus
(RGSV) gives headache to the rice farmers for it inhibits panicle production
through stunting and yellowing of the plant. This virus is commonly spread by
nymph and adult brown planthopper (BPH). However, BPH eggs do not transmit the
virus. BPH feeding on infected stubbles
for at least 30min transmits the virus.
Symptoms of the virus
develop from 10-12 days after infection. RGSV-infected hills manifest severely
stunted plants, excessive tillering, very upright plant growth, and grassy and
rosette appearance of plants.
Leaves are
yellowish-green that are shorter and narrower than normal appearance, and have
many small rusty spots or patches, which merge into blotches. Leaves that
remain yellow even when applied with sufficient nitrogen fertilizers is also a
symptom.
RGSV frequently affects
field where year-round and continuous rice growing is practiced. Although
plants can be infected in all growth stages, infection usually happens during
tillering stage.
Occurrence of RGSV is
not widespread, but it can be severe when BPH is present in the field. The
virus can be managed through planting BPH-resistant rice varieties such as NSIC
Rc 222, 298, and 308 and synchronous planting.
Populations of BPH should also be immediately managed. Infected fields should
be plowed right after harvest to reduce the virus source.
Ragged
stunt
Rice ragged stunt
(RRSV), also transmitted by BPH, can bring up to 80% yield losses by causing
partially exerted panicles, unfilled grains, and plant density loss. The leaves
of infected plants show ragged appearance.
BPH contacts the virus
by feeding on an infected plant within 24 hours, which can be transmitted to
other plants within 6 hours of infection. Early instar nymphs of BPH transmit
the virus more efficiently than its older stages. However, BPH eggs cannot
transmit the virus.
RRSV symptoms include
severe stunting during early crop stages, green leaves with darker than the
normal color that appears to have jagged uneven edges, and appearance of yellow
to yellow-brown leaves that twist into spiral shapes at the base of leaf
blades. The veins that develop on leaf blades and sheathes are usually swollen,
pale yellow, or white to dark brown. The underside of leaf blades and the outer
surface of leaf sheaths have galls. Infected crops will also display delayed
flowering and incomplete panicle emergence.
Like the tungro virus,
RRSV-infected plants cannot be treated so preventive rather than direct-control
measures should be implemented. Planting BPH-resistant varieties such as NSIC
Rc 222, 298, and 308 is the most defensive measure. Synchronous planting and
plowing of infected stubbles under the field after harvest are also encouraged.
Niones noted that to
manage the four types of viruses, infected plants should be immediately removed
once the disease is detected. They can be prevented by practicing fallow period
at least one month between each cropping to reduce the pests’ food supply;
reducing their populations. Resistant varieties should also be considered but
insecticide should only be applied when needed.
Rice specialists train farmers in Visayas, Mindanao
In an effort to mold
more new generation of rice specialists, graduates of the Rice Specialists Training
Course (RSTC) spearheaded by the Philippine Rice Research Institute of the
Department of Agriculture (DA-PhilRice) conduct training courses among partners
and stakeholders in their areas.
In Visayas and Mindanao,
RSTC trainees who graduated in Oct. 2019, cascaded down their technical
competency to the local agriculture technicians and extensionists.
As part of the Rice
Competitiveness Enhancement Fund (RCEF) – Extension Program, the RSTC graduates
are encouraged to extend their acquired skills and knowledge to agriculture
workers especially that the shift in the rice trade system has posed more
challenges among farmers.
“After finishing the
RSTC, it is now our responsibility to share the learning to our farmers and
seed growers,” said Dax Gabrielle D. Morfe, assistant seed coordinator of DA
-Regional Field Office 8.
Morfe, who works under
the seed and seeds component section, has already trained more than 90
potential seed growers. Seed growers
play a vital role under the RCEF seed program, which aims to provide seed
assistance to farmers.
“The new seed growers
were thankful as they were able to upgrade their practices especially on crop
management,” Morfe said.
He said that the
training is relevant as sources of high-quality seeds in their area are
limited.
“Hopefully, this
training will produce more seed growers in Eastern Visayas and will increase
the supply of certified seeds,” Morfe said.
The season-long RSTC
training is divided into three modules that aims to strengthen field problem diagnosis
and decision-making skills based on the concepts and principles of the
PalayCheck and Palayamanan Systems.
For Junalyn Palco,
training assistant at the Agricultural Training Institute Regional Training
Center (ATI-RTC) in Region 8, working in the training and extension arm of DA
gives her the avenue to help more farmers become more competitive.
“As an RSTC graduate, I
am tasked to equip farmers with knowledge about rice production technology that
will help them reduce cost and produce more yield. Most of our trainees, who
are farmer-leaders, local agriculture technicians, or extensionists, have
become more open to the new rice farming technologies including the shift to
mechanization,” she said.
In Mindanao, Rejane Ata,
technical staff at ATI-RTC in Caraga, noted that the training had helped them
gain more confidence in handling large groups of farmers.
“I have gained more
exposure, particularly in the field, that helped me gain knowledge. Since our
job involves training farmers, it is very essential that we don’t just learn
the theories, but be hands-on as well, especially that most farmers believe
what they see,” Ata, who had trained about 120 agriculture workers said.
The Extension Services
Program under RCEF enhances knowledge of extension workers for them to
effectively train rice farmers and improves farmers’ skills on yield-enhancing
and cost-reducing rice production practices and technologies.
Fifty
simple, delicious three-ingredient recipes
From latkes to
teriyaki chicken, you can still rustle up great food with just a few supplies
Dale
Berning Sawa
Potato latkes. Photograph: iStock.
Most easy recipes are not easy. Achieving simplicity is never
actually that simple, but in the kitchen it is usually also contingent on a
well-trained hand and a very well-stocked pantry. This makes the genuinely easy
three-ingredient recipe a holy grail of sorts.
Here, then, the mother lode: 50 three-ingredient beauties. Some
are meals in themselves. Some are a good base to build upon. Others still are a
sweet something for afters. They run the gamut from “blink and it’s ready” to a
long, slow cook, but none will break the bank. Crucially, all use only three
things other than oil, butter, salt, pepper and water. As simple as ready, steady
… cook!
Green frittata
Jacob Kenedy, Bocca di Lupo
Roughly chop some green veg (spinach, chard, artichoke, chard, kale, asparagus…), and pan-fry with a little oil until slightly browned and properly hot. Beat 5-10 room-temperature eggs (depending on pan size) with whichever grated cheese you have (parmesan, pecorino, feta …), then stir the hot veg into the eggs, and reheat the pan over a medium-high flame.
Roughly chop some green veg (spinach, chard, artichoke, chard, kale, asparagus…), and pan-fry with a little oil until slightly browned and properly hot. Beat 5-10 room-temperature eggs (depending on pan size) with whichever grated cheese you have (parmesan, pecorino, feta …), then stir the hot veg into the eggs, and reheat the pan over a medium-high flame.
Run a dash of oil round the edge of the pan and add the mixture,
lower the heat and cook for eight minutes or so, until half set. Turn out on to
a plate (this takes confidence and grace), reheat the pan to medium-high, slide
the frittata back in and tuck in the edges with a spoon. Reduce the heat to low
and cook for a further eight minutes, until just firm, or you have a hunch it
might have just a little seductive ooze in the centre. Turn out again and let
cool a little before serving, warmish.
Puff
pastry pizza. Photograph: iStock.
Puff-pastry ‘pizza’
Miguel Barclay
Cut a square of puff pastry, score a 1cm border and scatter over cheese, then tomatoes. Season with salt, pepper and oregano (optional), then bake for about 25 minutes at 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas mark 4.
Cut a square of puff pastry, score a 1cm border and scatter over cheese, then tomatoes. Season with salt, pepper and oregano (optional), then bake for about 25 minutes at 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas mark 4.
Jerk and maple cauliflower florets
Denai Moore, Dee’s Table
Heat your oven to 200C (180C fan)/375F/gas mark 5. In a big bowl, mix two tablespoons of shop-bought jerk seasoning, two tablespoons of maple syrup and two tablespoons of olive oil. Add in half a cauliflower, broken up into florets. Season with salt and pepper and mix together to coat, taking care not to break the florets.
Heat your oven to 200C (180C fan)/375F/gas mark 5. In a big bowl, mix two tablespoons of shop-bought jerk seasoning, two tablespoons of maple syrup and two tablespoons of olive oil. Add in half a cauliflower, broken up into florets. Season with salt and pepper and mix together to coat, taking care not to break the florets.
Grease a baking tray with one tablespoon of olive oil and lay
out the florets in a single layer. Cover with a piece of baking paper and put
another baking tray on top to weigh down on the cauliflower. Bake for 30
minutes, turning the florets over after 15 minutes, until caramelised and
sticky.
Feta-filled potato pops
Sabrina Ghayour, cookbook author
Peel and quarter two medium potatoes, then simmer for 20-25 minutes, until soft. Mash finely, then set aside to cool and refrigerate for a couple of hours. In another bowl, mash up 100g feta with black pepper. Shape the potato mash into ping-pong ball-sized portions and flatten in the palm of your hand to approximately ¾cm thickness. Pile a compressed teaspoon of the feta mixture into the centre of the mash disc and then bring the edges over the filling to seal the ball, filling any cracks with more mash. Lightly dust each ball with flour (you’ll need 3-4 tablespoons in total) and repeat.
Peel and quarter two medium potatoes, then simmer for 20-25 minutes, until soft. Mash finely, then set aside to cool and refrigerate for a couple of hours. In another bowl, mash up 100g feta with black pepper. Shape the potato mash into ping-pong ball-sized portions and flatten in the palm of your hand to approximately ¾cm thickness. Pile a compressed teaspoon of the feta mixture into the centre of the mash disc and then bring the edges over the filling to seal the ball, filling any cracks with more mash. Lightly dust each ball with flour (you’ll need 3-4 tablespoons in total) and repeat.
Heat some oil in a frying pan. When nice and hot, fry the pops
until golden brown on both sides, removing with a slotted spoon and draining on
kitchen paper when ready. Serve with your favourite sauces or chutneys.
Latkes
Itamar Srulovich and Sarit Packer, Honey &
Co
Grate two or three potatoes, place in a colander and sprinkle with salt. Leave in the sink to release some moisture for a few minutes, then squeeze out the rest of the moisture with your hands, place the potato in a bowl and add an egg and a tablespoon or two of self-raising flour (plain flour will do if that is what you have) and more black pepper than you think you need, then mix. If the mix is very loose, add more flour. Heat oil in a pan, about 1cm deep, and drop in little mounds of the mix. Turn when crisp and brown on one side, then take out and place on absorbent paper. Optional extras in the mix include thinly sliced onions or spring onions, anchovies, oregano, feta and smoked paprika.
Grate two or three potatoes, place in a colander and sprinkle with salt. Leave in the sink to release some moisture for a few minutes, then squeeze out the rest of the moisture with your hands, place the potato in a bowl and add an egg and a tablespoon or two of self-raising flour (plain flour will do if that is what you have) and more black pepper than you think you need, then mix. If the mix is very loose, add more flour. Heat oil in a pan, about 1cm deep, and drop in little mounds of the mix. Turn when crisp and brown on one side, then take out and place on absorbent paper. Optional extras in the mix include thinly sliced onions or spring onions, anchovies, oregano, feta and smoked paprika.
Jacket potato with kimchi
Judy Joo, Jinjuu
Slit open a baked potato, stuff with some chopped-up kimchi, cover with grated cheese and place under a grill until melted and browning.
Slit open a baked potato, stuff with some chopped-up kimchi, cover with grated cheese and place under a grill until melted and browning.
Gnocchi
Roberta d’Elia, Pasta Evangelists
Bring a large pot of water to the boil. Peel 1kg potatoes (red if possible) and cook over a low heat until tender, but still firm, taking care that the skin doesn’t break (so they don’t absorb too much water). This will take 15-20 minutes. Drain, cool down and mash with a fork. Mix in 300g flour (plain, bread or gluten-free will work) and one egg, then knead until a dough forms.
Bring a large pot of water to the boil. Peel 1kg potatoes (red if possible) and cook over a low heat until tender, but still firm, taking care that the skin doesn’t break (so they don’t absorb too much water). This will take 15-20 minutes. Drain, cool down and mash with a fork. Mix in 300g flour (plain, bread or gluten-free will work) and one egg, then knead until a dough forms.
Divide into four portions and shape into long snakes, about
1.5cm in diameter, then cut into 1cm-long pieces. Bring a large pan of salted
water to the boil and cook the gnocchi for 2-3 minutes, or until they rise to
the surface. Drain and serve with your favourite sauce: butter and sage,
gorgonzola and cream with parma ham and walnuts, beef ragu, caprese sauce,
basil pesto.
Chickpea and carrot crepes
Anna Jones
Jones puts caraway seeds in her batter and serves the crepes with vegetables, leaves, cheese and eggs. Adapt as you see fit: the basic recipe is a keeper.
Jones puts caraway seeds in her batter and serves the crepes with vegetables, leaves, cheese and eggs. Adapt as you see fit: the basic recipe is a keeper.
Mix together 250g of chickpea flour, 250g of grated carrots and
350ml of milk to obtain a thin, smooth pancake batter. Heat one teaspoon of
olive oil in a medium, non-stick frying pan over a medium heat. Add a small
ladle of the batter to the pan. Work quickly to swirl it around so the batter
covers the base of the pan. Cook for a couple of minutes, then flip over and
cook on the other side for another 30 seconds. Repeat with the rest of the
batter, adding a little more oil each time. Stack the crepes on a plate with
greaseproof paper in between each; keep warm in a low oven.
Tomato with strawberries and basil
Massimiliano Alajmo, Le Calandre
Make a salad of ripe tomatoes and strawberry, sliced, with fresh basil leaves. Season with extra virgin olive oil and flaky salt.
Make a salad of ripe tomatoes and strawberry, sliced, with fresh basil leaves. Season with extra virgin olive oil and flaky salt.
Tomatoes with cottage cheese
Rui Silvestre, Vistas
Blitz 200g of plum tomatoes with a pinch of salt and strain through a sieve. Blitz 50g basil leaves with 100g olive oil, then add to the tomato juice, season to taste and chill in the fridge. Blanche another 300g tomatoes in boiling water for 5-10 seconds then chill in iced water and remove the skin. Blitz 50g cottage cheese with flaky salt, olive oil and ground black pepper until smooth. Serve the skinned tomatoes on a bed of cottage cheese cream, drizzled with the basil oil juice mixture.
Blitz 200g of plum tomatoes with a pinch of salt and strain through a sieve. Blitz 50g basil leaves with 100g olive oil, then add to the tomato juice, season to taste and chill in the fridge. Blanche another 300g tomatoes in boiling water for 5-10 seconds then chill in iced water and remove the skin. Blitz 50g cottage cheese with flaky salt, olive oil and ground black pepper until smooth. Serve the skinned tomatoes on a bed of cottage cheese cream, drizzled with the basil oil juice mixture.
Tomato and orange soup
Itamar Srulovich and Sarit Packer, Honey & Co
Peel and slice 10 (yes, 10) cloves of garlic. Slice one orange (skin and all, removing the pips). Place 60ml of olive oil in a pot and gently fry the garlic until fragrant. Add in the orange slices and fry until they start to brown a bit, then add a tin of chopped tomatoes and the same amount of water. Simmer for 20 minutes, then blitz with a stick blender until very smooth. Adjust the seasoning with salt and, if necessary, sugar as well, depending on how sweet the orange is. Delicious served with sourdough toast and goat’s cheese; the addition of some thyme or oregano works, too.
Peel and slice 10 (yes, 10) cloves of garlic. Slice one orange (skin and all, removing the pips). Place 60ml of olive oil in a pot and gently fry the garlic until fragrant. Add in the orange slices and fry until they start to brown a bit, then add a tin of chopped tomatoes and the same amount of water. Simmer for 20 minutes, then blitz with a stick blender until very smooth. Adjust the seasoning with salt and, if necessary, sugar as well, depending on how sweet the orange is. Delicious served with sourdough toast and goat’s cheese; the addition of some thyme or oregano works, too.
Sweet potato flatbreads
Mandy Mazliah, sneakyveg.com
Peel and chop a large sweet potato and steam or boil until soft. Blend until smooth or mash by hand. Place 200g of plain flour in a large mixing bowl and rub in 200g of the sweet potato mash (reserving the rest) with your fingertips, until it resembles breadcrumbs.
Peel and chop a large sweet potato and steam or boil until soft. Blend until smooth or mash by hand. Place 200g of plain flour in a large mixing bowl and rub in 200g of the sweet potato mash (reserving the rest) with your fingertips, until it resembles breadcrumbs.
Season to taste and add in a little water to make a smooth
dough. Divide into six small balls and roll out on a lightly floured surface
with a rolling pin dusted with flour. Heat a heavy-bottomed pan over a medium
heat and fry the flatbreads one at a time, for two minutes on each side. Serve
immediately, or wrap in a clean tea towel or foil to keep soft while you cook
the rest.
Chicken thighs with teriyaki sauce
Simon Wood, BBC MasterChef champion
In a hot frying pan, cook 1kg of chicken thighs in vegetable oil until golden all over. Add 220ml of soy sauce and 100g of brown sugar and stir to bring to a boil. Continue stirring until the chicken it cooked and the sauce has reduced; it should evenly coat the chicken, making it sticky.
In a hot frying pan, cook 1kg of chicken thighs in vegetable oil until golden all over. Add 220ml of soy sauce and 100g of brown sugar and stir to bring to a boil. Continue stirring until the chicken it cooked and the sauce has reduced; it should evenly coat the chicken, making it sticky.
Chicken thighs with tandoori masala
and lime
Romy Gill, Ready Steady Cook chef and cookbook author
Stab six chicken thighs all over with a fork, then place in a bowl with six teaspoons of tandoori masala, the juice of one lime (lemon works, too), six teaspoons of oil and 20ml of cold water. Leave it to marinate for 20-30 minutes and heat an oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas mark 4. Place a baking sheet on a baking tray and, when ready, place the marinated chicken on the sheet and cook for about an hour, or until the juices run clear.
Stab six chicken thighs all over with a fork, then place in a bowl with six teaspoons of tandoori masala, the juice of one lime (lemon works, too), six teaspoons of oil and 20ml of cold water. Leave it to marinate for 20-30 minutes and heat an oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas mark 4. Place a baking sheet on a baking tray and, when ready, place the marinated chicken on the sheet and cook for about an hour, or until the juices run clear.
Alternatively, use four teaspoons of harissa (rose harissa, if
you can find any), the juice of one lemon and one teaspoon of salt.
Tofu with soy sauce and minced
ginger
Anna Thomson
Cut two packs of silken tofu into quarters. Gently slip into a pan of boiling water to heat through. Remove with a slotted spoon and place in four bowls, two pieces per person. Top with soy sauce and minced ginger. Also good topped with toasted sesame seeds and chopped spring onion.
Cut two packs of silken tofu into quarters. Gently slip into a pan of boiling water to heat through. Remove with a slotted spoon and place in four bowls, two pieces per person. Top with soy sauce and minced ginger. Also good topped with toasted sesame seeds and chopped spring onion.
Rice
crop likely to be affected after India stops water flow
BY NEWS
DESK , (LAST UPDATED 1 DAY AGO)
India has stopped 14,000 cusecs
of water flowing into Pakistan via River Chenab, the Pakistani Ministry of
Water Resources said on Wednesday, fearing the reduced water flow could damage
the rice crop.
The flow of water in Chenab has
been reduced to 18,000 cusecs, the officials said. It was at 31,800 cusecs on
Tuesday.
Due to this, the rice crop is
feared to be affected in areas stretching from Marala to Panjnad headworks in
Punjab.
India has diverted this water to
Baglihar and Ratle dams, the officials added.
|
Vietnam's
rice export ban not to affect Mongolia: Ambassador
AKIPRESS.COM - Ambassador of Vietnam to
Mongolia Nguyen Thi Doan told the Mongolian Ministry of Food, Agriculture and
Light Industry that Mongolia will not be subject to rice export restrictions
imposed by the Government of Vietnam until the end of June and handed over the
letter from the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development of Vietnam Nguyen
Xuan Cuong.
Mongolia's main food product,
rice, is 100 percent dependent on imports. Mongolia consumes an average of
50,000 tons of rice a year, about 50 percent of which is imported from Vietnam,
Montsame reports.
However, due to the COVID-19
pandemic, countries have begun to take measures to restrict exports of some
food products in accordance with their economic characteristics and there is a
potential risk of rice shortages and price rise in Mongolia. Accordingly, the
Minister of Food, Agriculture and Light Industry and Head of Mongolia-Vietnam
Intergovernmental Commission Ch.Ulaan conveyed a request to the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development of Vietnam on maintaining the stability of
rice export.
Sides also agreed to develop
recommendations for the export of heat-processed meat and meat products to Vietnam,
and to grant International Veterinary Certificate for deep-frozen meat
electronically.
The Ministry of Food, Agriculture
and Light Industry will continue to focus on policy measures to stabilize the
supply of key food items during the pandemic.
Riverina rice grower investigates
water use efficiency in overseas systems
MAY 7 2020 - 8:03AM
EFFICIENCY: Rice grower and 2017 Nuffield Scholar Mark
Groat, who with support from AgriFutures Australia travelled across the United
States, South America, China and India. Picture: Supplied
Making the most out of every drop
of water is key to the survival and growth of the Australian rice industry and
an urgent step-change is required for the industry to thrive into the future.
That's a key research finding of
NSW rice grower and 2017 Nuffield Scholar Mark Groat, who with support from
AgriFutures Australia travelled across the United States, South America, China
and India drawing comparisons and insights for rice production back in Australia.
Mr Groat's report outlines that
with lower water allocations and higher water prices posing major challenges
for the rice industry, increasing water use efficiency both in terms of
production per megalitre and return per megalitre must be a critical focus.
"It's about gaining a
greater return for the water used, whether that's in terms of yield, quality,
consumer demand, or company reputation," Mr Groat said.
Exploring the role of genetic
enhancement of rice, the report looks at the successes of both short-season
rice varieties and a system of stubble management implemented in North-West
India.
"Shortening the season by
developing 110-day rice varieties (instead of the conventional 140-day variety)
enables planting to be delayed by a month, avoiding extreme heat during the
mid-May to June period," he said.
"The added benefit of
bringing planting closer to monsoonal rains of late June allows water use to be
decreased by 35 percent without compromising yield.
"Winter crop rotation and
stubble management has also dramatically increased WUE while enhancing soil
characteristics in the region.
"As is the case in
Australia, looking at the system as a whole, rather than the individual crop,
is key."
Mr Groat's report features a
series of comparative case studies from international rice growing regions with
similar geographic and climatic traits as Australia, such as the USA's
Mississippi Delta, Uruguay, North-East China and North-West India.
"We are world leaders in
terms of rice yield per hectare, but I wanted to better understand how we
compare to the rest of the world in terms of our water use efficiency," he
said.
"In the Mississippi Delta,
the majority of water is pumped from the Mississippi River Valley alluvial
aquifer with no regulation on extraction, and no charge for water," he
said.
"This has led to largely
inefficient water usage and aquifer depletion by between 0.15 and 0.45 metres
per year. "Efforts in the region to address aquifer overdraft are aimed at
irrigation efficiency, however uptake has been very low."
A number of case study
comparisons reveal Australia to be a leader in efficient and sustainable rice
production, but the report concludes that the free market system of water in
southern rice growing regions means rice is just another crop competing for a
finite resource.
"Benchmarking of Australian
data shows an identifiable yield gap of two tonnes per hectare between the
average and top 20 percent of growers," Mr Groat said.
"Identifying and addressing
causes of this gap, decreasing evaporation and increasing marketability are key
components to increasing water use efficiency in terms of dollars per
megalitre."
Ultimately, the report recommends
the industry re-focus on benchmarking, extension and research into in-situ
stubble management. "This is an extremely challenging time for the
Australian rice industry, but it's also a time of immense opportunity," he
said.
"The combination of
technology, irrigation design, crop protection products and rice genetics has
opened the door to maximising water use efficiency like never before. "If
as an industry we can focus on effective in-situ stubble management, identify
and prioritise extension services on yield gaps, re-evaluate our research
priorities and better tell our story, then we will be better placed to seize
the opportunities before us."
Govt suspends Boro rice procurement
through app amid coronavirus crisis
Published: 07 May 2020 02:10 PM BdST Updated: 07 May 2020 02:10 PM BdST
·
The government has backtracked on
its decision to buy Boro rice from farmers this year in 18 Upazilas through a
mobile app amid the coronavirus crisis.
The Ministry of Food sent a
letter to the Directorate General of Food instructing the state agency to
procure rice digitally next season instead.
The government usually buys rice
from mill owners to stockpile it.
India rice prices
gain, expensive Thai offers lose out
BENGALURU
(Reuters) - Rice export prices from India held near a nine-month high this week
on strong demand from buyers in both Asia and Africa, with Thailand losing out
to cheaper grain from the top exporter.
A farmer carries saplings to plant in a rice field on the
outskirts of Ahmedabad, July 5, 2019. REUTERS/Amit Dave/Files
India’s 5% broken parboiled
variety was quoted at $378-$383 per tonne, unchanged from last week.
Demand for Indian rice from Asian
and African buyers has been slowly improving as New Delhi is offering more
competitive prices than Thailand, said an exporter based at Kakinada in the
southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.
A weak rupee also helped, raising
exporters’ margin from overseas sales, the exporter said.
Thailand’s benchmark 5% broken
rice prices were quoted at $515–$546, down from $535-$557 the week before,
on easing concerns over domestic supply even as overseas demand remained
unchanged, traders said.
“Prices have been high because
mills were concerned about possible shortages, but after a spell of rainfall,
the mills are starting to sell their stock again,” a Bangkok-based rice trader
said.
One of the worst droughts in
decades earlier this year had put a strain on supply and pushed Thai rice
prices to their highest in about seven years in early April.
But the supply concerns have now
eased due to recent rains and forecasts for more in the country’s rice growing
regions.
Lower domestic supplies,
meanwhile, pushed rates for 5% broken rice from Vietnam to a fresh two-year
peak of $450 per tonne on Thursday, but activity on the export market remained
quiet.
“Not many new contracts have been
signed recently as domestic supplies are running low,” a trader based in Ho Chi
Minh City said.
“Many local firms are focusing on
their rice purchase from farmers for the national stockpiling program.”
Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen
Xuan Phuc last week agreed to fully resume the country’s rice exports from this
month, after banning exports in March and limiting shipments for April to
500,000 tonnes to make sure the country had sufficient food during the
coronavirus pandemic.
Meanwhile, Bangladesh’s food
ministry said on Thursday the country would buy 1.15 million tonnes of rice and
800,000 tonnes of paddy from local farmers in the current harvesting season to
secure supplies.
Panic buying has driven domestic
rice prices to a two-year high in Bangladesh as the number of coronavirus cases
in the country surpassed 10,000 as of Monday.
Rice Prices
as on : 07-05-2020 03:25:42 PM
Arrivals in tonnes;prices in
Rs/quintal in domestic market.
Arrivals
|
Price
|
|||||
Current
|
%
change |
Season
cumulative |
Modal
|
Prev.
Modal |
Prev.Yr
%change |
|
Rice
|
||||||
Gadarpur(Utr)
|
4555.00
|
344.39
|
87886.00
|
2670
|
3225
|
-20.89
|
Mandya(Kar)
|
660.00
|
20.66
|
2089.00
|
2510
|
2480
|
-
|
Manjeri(Ker)
|
290.00
|
NC
|
8410.00
|
3500
|
3500
|
NC
|
Bangarpet(Kar)
|
225.00
|
99.12
|
3577.00
|
2100
|
2200
|
-
|
Bindki(UP)
|
170.00
|
-5.56
|
4734.00
|
2430
|
2400
|
4.29
|
Azamgarh(UP)
|
150.00
|
-25
|
3470.00
|
2550
|
2535
|
4.08
|
Lucknow(UP)
|
87.00
|
-10.31
|
3802.00
|
2460
|
2460
|
-6.82
|
Ghaziabad(UP)
|
80.00
|
14.29
|
1256.00
|
2700
|
2700
|
NC
|
Naugarh(UP)
|
60.00
|
7.14
|
3050.00
|
2520
|
2530
|
5.00
|
Kandi(WB)
|
60.00
|
-14.29
|
1029.50
|
2650
|
2650
|
6.00
|
Mathura(UP)
|
41.00
|
2.5
|
2396.00
|
2580
|
2590
|
-5.49
|
Aligarh(UP)
|
40.00
|
NC
|
3195.00
|
2550
|
2550
|
1.19
|
Firozabad(UP)
|
35.00
|
-4.11
|
902.60
|
2610
|
2600
|
-
|
Guskara(Burdwan)(WB)
|
34.00
|
NC
|
260.00
|
2600
|
2500
|
-
|
Honnali(Kar)
|
32.00
|
166.67
|
211.00
|
3140
|
3000
|
-
|
Partaval(UP)
|
31.50
|
57.5
|
482.50
|
2470
|
2475
|
8.10
|
Jafarganj(UP)
|
30.00
|
36.36
|
728.00
|
2380
|
2360
|
10.19
|
Beldanga(WB)
|
30.00
|
-14.29
|
970.00
|
3000
|
3000
|
11.11
|
Khalilabad(UP)
|
25.00
|
-16.67
|
1130.00
|
2550
|
2525
|
13.33
|
Agra(UP)
|
25.00
|
4.17
|
2988.00
|
2580
|
2565
|
-3.37
|
Haridwar Union(Utr)
|
25.00
|
-28.57
|
107.00
|
4625
|
5100
|
-
|
Asansol(WB)
|
25.00
|
1.63
|
718.19
|
2850
|
2850
|
-6.56
|
Durgapur(WB)
|
23.50
|
2.17
|
632.75
|
2850
|
2850
|
NC
|
Bharthna(UP)
|
20.00
|
566.67
|
2098.00
|
2550
|
2500
|
12.33
|
Choubepur(UP)
|
20.00
|
-27.27
|
1225.65
|
2570
|
2550
|
-3.93
|
Egra/contai(WB)
|
20.00
|
42.86
|
388.50
|
2700
|
2800
|
17.39
|
Karsiyang(Matigara)(WB)
|
19.50
|
1.56
|
559.30
|
5000
|
5000
|
66.67
|
Katwa(WB)
|
18.40
|
-1.6
|
197.00
|
2600
|
2600
|
-
|
Jaunpur(UP)
|
18.00
|
-34.55
|
985.20
|
2460
|
2450
|
5.13
|
Mainpuri(UP)
|
18.00
|
-5.26
|
3283.50
|
2620
|
2610
|
8.26
|
Basti(UP)
|
16.00
|
-23.81
|
1003.50
|
2550
|
2550
|
8.51
|
Rampur(UP)
|
16.00
|
-11.11
|
332.00
|
2590
|
2590
|
1.57
|
Sirsaganj(UP)
|
15.00
|
-6.25
|
594.50
|
2610
|
2600
|
-5.09
|
Devariya(UP)
|
14.00
|
-6.67
|
814.50
|
2585
|
2575
|
5.08
|
Soharatgarh(UP)
|
11.50
|
-11.54
|
1333.70
|
2540
|
2535
|
5.83
|
Sheoraphuly(WB)
|
11.20
|
-0.88
|
117.20
|
3100
|
3100
|
3.33
|
Holenarsipura(Kar)
|
10.00
|
-72.22
|
49.00
|
2200
|
2000
|
-
|
Arakalgud(Kar)
|
10.00
|
-
|
10.00
|
2500
|
-
|
-
|
Ajuha(UP)
|
9.00
|
28.57
|
210.00
|
2500
|
2500
|
5.26
|
Jhijhank(UP)
|
8.00
|
77.78
|
171.50
|
2530
|
2520
|
-
|
Dahod(Guj)
|
7.50
|
-62.5
|
658.20
|
4400
|
4400
|
4.76
|
Unnao(UP)
|
7.20
|
-20
|
118.00
|
2450
|
2450
|
7.22
|
Chandoli(UP)
|
7.00
|
-6.67
|
35.20
|
2475
|
2475
|
7.14
|
Etah(UP)
|
7.00
|
-22.22
|
267.50
|
2570
|
2580
|
0.39
|
Kasganj(UP)
|
5.00
|
25
|
371.50
|
2540
|
2550
|
-0.78
|
Shikohabad(UP)
|
5.00
|
400
|
253.00
|
2600
|
2600
|
6.12
|
Fatehpur Sikri(UP)
|
3.80
|
5.56
|
78.30
|
2570
|
2590
|
-0.19
|
Mahoba(UP)
|
3.10
|
-11.43
|
298.40
|
2450
|
2465
|
8.17
|
Sindhanur(Kar)
|
3.00
|
-81.25
|
19.00
|
3800
|
4000
|
-
|
Achalda(UP)
|
3.00
|
-25
|
202.10
|
2450
|
2460
|
10.86
|
Bishnupur(Bankura)(WB)
|
3.00
|
NC
|
179.50
|
2650
|
2650
|
NC
|
Perinthalmanna(Ker)
|
2.90
|
-
|
14.50
|
3200
|
-
|
14.29
|
Uluberia(WB)
|
2.80
|
NC
|
35.50
|
3100
|
3300
|
6.90
|
Kosikalan(UP)
|
2.70
|
-10
|
176.00
|
2550
|
2600
|
2.00
|
Yusufpur(UP)
|
2.40
|
-
|
2.40
|
2150
|
-
|
-4.87
|
Auraiya(UP)
|
2.00
|
11.11
|
201.10
|
2550
|
2500
|
8.51
|
Khair(UP)
|
2.00
|
150
|
52.50
|
2560
|
2560
|
-1.54
|
Mawana(UP)
|
2.00
|
-37.5
|
100.20
|
2620
|
2625
|
-
|
Nadia(WB)
|
2.00
|
-33.33
|
202.00
|
4200
|
4200
|
10.53
|
Charra(UP)
|
1.60
|
-5.88
|
74.60
|
2550
|
2550
|
0.20
|
Khatra(WB)
|
1.60
|
6.67
|
93.60
|
2650
|
2650
|
NC
|
Panichowki(Kumarghat)(Tri)
|
1.30
|
-27.78
|
21.50
|
2950
|
2960
|
-
|
Anandnagar(UP)
|
1.30
|
-23.53
|
177.90
|
2515
|
2500
|
7.02
|
Jumpuijala(Tri)
|
1.20
|
-65.71
|
115.50
|
3100
|
3100
|
-
|
Melaghar(Tri)
|
1.00
|
NC
|
37.70
|
2800
|
2800
|
3.70
|
Manubazar(Tri)
|
0.75
|
-
|
0.75
|
2500
|
-
|
-
|
Published on May 07, 2020