Teff
Eragrostis tef
Teff (Eragrostis tef) is a fine-stemmed, tufted annual cereal grass native to the Ethiopian Highlands and Eritrea, where it has been cultivated for thousands of years as a staple grain. It belongs to the grass family Poaceae and produces some of the smallest grains of any cereal crop — each kernel measuring only about 1 mm in diameter.
Teff is the primary ingredient in injera, the spongy, sourdough flatbread that is central to Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine. Despite its tiny grain size, teff is nutritionally exceptional: it is naturally gluten-free, rich in dietary fiber, iron, calcium, and protein, and contains a balanced profile of essential amino acids.
• One of the earliest domesticated crops in Africa, with evidence of cultivation dating back at least 3,000–5,000 years
• The name "tef" is derived from the Amharic word "teffa," meaning "lost," a reference to the tiny seeds that are easily misplaced
• Accounts for roughly two-thirds of daily protein intake in the Ethiopian diet
• Grown on approximately 3 million hectares annually in Ethiopia, making it the country's most important cereal by area planted
• Has recently gained international popularity as a gluten-free "superfood"
Taxonomie
• Domestication is estimated to have occurred between 4,000 and 1,000 BCE
• Wild progenitor: Eragrostis pilosa (a widespread weedy grass found across Africa and Asia)
• Historically confined almost exclusively to Ethiopia and Eritrea for millennia
• Teff seeds were reportedly carried to Yemen and India by traders but did not achieve significant cultivation outside the Horn of Africa until the late 20th century
• In Ethiopia, teff cultivation spans altitudes from 1,800 to 2,500 meters above sea level, though it can grow from near sea level up to 3,000 meters
• The Ethiopian Biodiversity Institute maintains over 5,000 teff accessions in its gene bank
Culms (Stems):
• Slender, usually 20–120 cm tall, with 2–5 nodes
• Can be erect or geniculately ascending (bent at the base)
• Commonly tillers profusely, producing multiple stems from a single plant
Leaves:
• Leaf blades are narrow, linear, flat or slightly involute, 10–45 cm long and 1–5 mm wide
• Ligule is a short ciliate membrane (~0.5 mm)
• Leaf sheaths are glabrous or slightly hairy
Inflorescence:
• Panicle is open, lax, and spreading, 10–50 cm long
• Branches are slender, whorled, bearing numerous small spikelets
• Spikelets are 4–8 mm long, laterally compressed, with 4–14 florets
• Lemmas are ovate, ~2 mm long, with three nerves
Grain (Caryopsis):
• Extremely small: approximately 1.0–1.5 mm in length and 0.6–1.0 mm in diameter
• Weight: approximately 0.2–0.4 mg per seed (one of the smallest known cereal grains)
• Color varies widely: ivory/white, light tan, dark brown, and purplish-brown varieties exist
• 1,000-seed weight is only about 0.2–0.3 grams (compared to ~40 g for wheat)
Root System:
• Fibrous and relatively shallow, concentrated in the top 20–30 cm of soil
Climate:
• Grows best at altitudes of 1,800–2,500 m with moderate temperatures (15–27°C)
• Requires 450–550 mm of rainfall during the growing season, typically falling over 3–4 months
• Sensitive to frost; cannot tolerate prolonged cold
• Day-length sensitive; most cultivars are short-day plants
• Growing season is relatively short: 60–120 days from sowing to harvest
Soil:
• Adaptable to a range of soil types, including clay loams, vertisols (black cotton soils), and sandy loams
• Prefers well-drained soils; highly susceptible to waterlogging
• Tolerates mildly acidic to mildly alkaline soils (pH 5.5–7.5)
• Moderately tolerant of salinity compared to other cereals
Ecological Role:
• As a C4 photosynthetic pathway plant, teff is highly efficient at carbon fixation under high light intensity and warm temperatures
• Its shallow, fibrous root system helps bind topsoil and reduce erosion on sloped Ethiopian highland terrain
• Commonly rotated with legumes (faba beans, field peas) in traditional Ethiopian farming systems
• Provides straw (after grain harvest) used as livestock feed and, when mixed with mud, as a building plaster
Reproduction:
• Predominantly self-pollinating (autogamous), with an outcrossing rate generally estimated at less than 1–2%
• Seed dispersal in wild relatives occurs through gravity and wind; domesticated teff relies entirely on human planting
Macronutrient Composition (per 100 g uncooked teff, approximate values):
• Energy: ~360–380 kcal
• Protein: 9–13 g (notably higher than most cereals)
• Carbohydrate: 70–76 g
• Dietary fiber: 6–12 g (depending on variety; whole-grain teff is an excellent fiber source)
• Fat: 2–3 g
Amino Acid Profile:
• Contains all eight essential amino acids
• Relatively high in lysine compared to other cereals (a limiting amino acid in most grains), making it complementary to legumes in the diet
Key Micronutrients (per 100 g uncooked teff, approximate values):
• Iron: 5–9 mg (one of the richest grain sources of iron; significantly higher than wheat or rice)
• Calcium: 120–180 mg (exceptionally high for a cereal; comparable to some dairy servings)
• Magnesium: 170–190 mg
• Phosphorus: 350–450 mg
• Zinc: 3–4 mg
• B vitamins (thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, B6): present in meaningful quantities
Gluten-Free:
• Teff is naturally entirely gluten-free, making it safe for individuals with celiac disease and suitable for gluten-free diets
Glycemic Response:
• Associated with a relatively low to moderate glycemic index, particularly beneficial for blood sugar management; studies suggest it may help improve glycemic control in diabetic populations
Climate Requirements:
• Warm-season crop; optimal daytime temperatures of 20–27°C during the growing season
• Frost-sensitive; must be planted after the last frost date in temperate regions
• Requires 450–550 mm of well-distributed rainfall or supplemental irrigation during its 60–120 day growing cycle
Soil:
• Prefers well-drained, fertile loams; does not tolerate waterlogging
• Soil pH of 5.5–7.5 is ideal
• Fields should be well-prepared with a fine, firm seedbed due to the extremely small seed size
Sowing:
• Seeding rate: 10–25 kg/ha (higher rates for broadcast sowing, lower for row planting)
• Seeds are broadcast on the surface or shallowly incorporated (0.5–1.5 cm depth) — seeds must not be buried deeply due to their minute size and limited energy reserves
• Germination occurs within 3–5 days under warm, moist conditions (optimal soil temperature: 15–35°C)
• Can be sown via broadcasting, drilling, or transplanting seedlings
Watering / Irrigation:
• Moderate water needs; adequate moisture is critical during tillering and grain-fill stages
• Excess moisture promotes lodging (stem collapse) and disease
Light:
• Full sun is required; performs poorly in shade
Fertilization:
• Responsive to nitrogen applications, though excessive nitrogen increases lodging risk
• Phosphorus fertilization is often beneficial on deficient soils
• Typical recommendation: 40–60 kg N/ha and 20–40 kg P₂O₅/ha depending on soil fertility
Harvest:
• Ready for harvest 60–120 days after sowing, when panicles turn golden-brown and grains harden
• Cutting is typically done by hand (in Ethiopia) or with a combine harvester (in mechanized systems)
• Grain is threshed and cleaned; straw is collected for animal feed
Propagation:
• By seed only; teff is an annual and completes its life cycle in one season
Common Challenges:
• Lodging (falling over of stems) is the most significant agronomic problem, reducing yield and harvest efficiency
• Bird damage to ripening grain can be substantial in some areas
• Limited availability of improved, lodging-resistant cultivars outside Ethiopia (though breeding programs are expanding)
Human Food:
• Injera: The primary and most iconic use — teff flour is fermented with water for 2–5 days to produce a sourdough batter, which is then baked on a large flat clay griddle (mitad) into a spongy, slightly sour flatbread. Injera serves simultaneously as plate, utensil, and food in Ethiopian and Eritrean dining traditions.
• Porridge (genfo): White or brown teff is cooked with water into a thick, hot porridge, often served with spiced butter and chili.
• Baked goods: Teff flour is increasingly used globally in gluten-free breads, pancakes, muffins, cookies, and pasta.
• Beverages: Teff is used in the production of tella, a traditional Ethiopian beer, and katikala, a distilled spirit.
• Baby food: Due to its digestibility and high iron content, teff is used in infant cereals.
Animal Feed:
• Teff straw is a valued livestock feed in Ethiopia, particularly for cattle, and is considered higher in nutritional value than most cereal straws.
Other Uses:
• Building material: Teff straw mixed with mud and water is traditionally used as plaster for walls and floors in Ethiopian construction.
• Emerging research is exploring teff starch for biodegradable packaging and industrial applications.
Cultural Significance:
• Teff holds deep cultural and spiritual significance in Ethiopia; injera made from teff is considered essential to meals and social rituals, and sharing injera symbolizes friendship and community.
• Ethiopia restricts the export of raw teff to protect domestic food security, though processed teff products (flour, injera) are exported.
Wusstest du schon?
Teff's tiny seeds pack an outsized punch: • A single teff seed weighs only about 0.3 milligrams — roughly 1/150th the weight of a wheat kernel. You would need approximately 150,000 teff seeds to fill a single teaspoon. • Despite its minuscule grain, teff can produce up to 10–20 million seeds per plant under optimal conditions. • Teff is one of the fastest-germinating cereal crops: seeds can begin to sprout within just 24–36 hours under warm, moist conditions. • In Ethiopia, teff is sometimes called "the grain that never sleeps" because farmers will sow, weed, and harvest teff fields at virtually any hour during the growing season, such is its importance to daily survival. • The iron content of teff is so high that some Ethiopian long-distance runners — who dominate global distance running — credit teff-based diets (particularly injera) as a contributing factor to their endurance and oxygen-carrying capacity. • Teff was virtually unknown outside Ethiopia until the late 20th century. The Ethiopian government imposed a ban on raw teff exports in 2006 to prevent domestic shortages, and it wasn't until the 2010s that teff-based products began appearing on supermarket shelves in Europe, North America, and Australia as a celebrated "ancient grain" and gluten-free superfood.
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