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PROPOSED PACKAGING FROM ALITA

Wheat is a significant ingredient in every household kitchen. ALITA Packaging specializes in offering a quality range of wheat packaging to our customers as per their demand. In our wheat bags, the integrity of grains can be kept unharmed for a very long time. We provide multiple packaging solutions for the wheat industry. It includes BOPP laminated PP woven bags in the 5kg to 50kg range. In addition to this, we can also offer two variants of handle bags – bottom stitched bags and bottom-gusseted bags in 5kg and 10Kg categories, which is widely used in industry for our day to day shopping needs also.

We have always laid crucial importance for the branding on the wheat bags. Our bags are designed such that the brand value is maintained on both the sides of the pack. The stability of the bags too is kept in mind. They are prepared as per the required strength, which can be helpful in all types of weather conditions. Moreover, we have always produced them with the various breathability options to take care of the in-filled product. Another important aspect is the material of the bags. It is chosen in a way that preserves the essence of wheat even in the long run of time.

Wheat is a highly-nutritional and widely-cultivated cereal grain. It’s one of the world’s most important crops and holds the title of the second most-produced grain in the world, beaten only by corn. Wheat provides 20% of the global population’s daily protein intake. The reason that wheat is such an important dietary staple across so many regions is due to its ability to be produced in different types of soils and climates.

As one of the first grains to be domesticated, modern wheat developed from cultivation starting in the Middle East about 9-11,000 years ago in the fertile crescent of the Middle East. Without a clearly identifiable timeframe, the Neolithic period is identified by the domestication of crops and animals, which began with the development of farming and endured until the development of metal tools. By 4,000 BC the expanding geographical range of farming resulted in bread wheat becoming a common staple from England to China. Although rice was more important to the development of East Asian cultures, wheat was the nutritional foundation for cultures in Europe, the middle east and western Asia. Wheat was introduced in Mexico by the Spaniards around 1520, and to early American colonists in the 1600’s. At that time it was not popular in New England due to the soils and climate, but in the mid-1800s wheat was grown from seeds introduced by migrating Europeans and agricultural scientists in the area that would later be called the “Wheat Belt.”

The 1830s saw the development of the reaping and threshing machines, allowing farmers to greatly increase their productivity during harvest. The development of the steam engine in the 1880s and the internal combustion engine in the 1920s increased farmers productivity during both planting and harvesting, and as a result wheat fields became larger.

The Wheat flour is used chiefly for making ‘bread’ and ‘chapatis’. It is also used for making biscuits, cakes, pastry, and similar articles. Wheat flakes are used as a breakfast food. Wheat is an important ingredient in the making of beer and other alcoholic beverages. Wheat straw is used for seating chairs, stuffing mattresses, etc. It makes good food for livestock. Wheat straw is also used as a fodder.