Cotton, Harvest, Fabric, Cottonseed, Cattle, Cooking - America's Heartland

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Hi, I'm Rob Stewart. Coming up, everything you ever wanted to know about a versatile crop that touches your life, every day. We're talking about a crop that impacts something you're wearing, carrying, maybe even cooking. It's all about cotton! We'll take you down South where cotton is king for some farmers. And you may be surprised at the hard work that goes into the harvest. And we'll travel to North Carolina where cotton goes from fiber to fabric. And what's the connection between cotton, catfish and chicken? We'll take you to Texas where one chef says without cotton, dinner at his restaurant just wouldn't be the same. It's all coming up on America's Heartland. ♪♪ >>America's Heartland is made possible by... >>CropLife America- Representing the companies whose modern farming innovations help America's farmers provide nutritious food for communities around the globe. The Fund for Agriculture Education - A fund created by KVIE to support America's Heartland programming. Contributors include the following: ♪♪ You can see it in the eyes of every woman and man ♪♪ ♪♪ In America's Heartland, livin' close to the land ♪♪ ♪♪ There's a love for the country ♪♪ ♪♪ And a pride in the brand ♪♪ ♪♪ In America's Heartland ♪♪ ♪♪ Livin' close... close to the land ♪♪ ♪♪ >> There's no denying that cotton is important in all of our lives- just look in your closet. It's one of the most versatile fabrics in the world. Cotton production, processing, and sales generate more than a hundred billion dollars each year to the U.S. economy. Sarah Gardner says it all starts with the crop in the field. >>Come late summer across much of the Southeast, you'll find cotton farmers taking to the fields to bring in their crops of fluffy white cotton. And here on Jay Hardwick's farm near Newellton, Louisiana, cotton production is all about growing more while using less. >>We've made tremendous progress over the years in terms of harvesting efficiencies and our approach to it. >>Jay will rotate multiple crops on more than 7 thousand acres. That crop rotation is important in marshalling equipment and human resources utilizing science and technology to maximize efficiency. >>The technology that's going into crops to make them insect resistant. This is a huge opportunity for agriculture because up to this point we've had to use a tremendous amount of pesticides to grow these crops. But now cotton is being grown with far less pesticides, which should be comforting to many, many people. >>In the 1920s and '30s, Boll Weevils exacted a heavy toll on America's cotton crops. These days new pesticides and other eradication programs have gone a long way in controlling that insect population. The cotton planting to harvest cycle here on the Hardwick farm takes about 150 days. As part of the process, Jay decides when to spray his plants with defoliant, forcing the leaves to drop, and making his cotton easier to harvest. >>What we're trying to do is allow the cotton to open to where it's 60% of the bolls, this is the fruit of the- of the cotton plant, when that boll opens up and is a cotton like this that's ready to be picked. We try to create a harvest efficiency by opening up all the bolls so we can pick at one time. >>Okay and how do you go about applying the chemical to the field? >>We use what are called a ground rig, it's a tractor with a spray boom on it and it's a self-contained cab the operator is in a closed environment, so he doesn't come in contact with any of the materials that we spray on the farm so it's a very clean operation. ♪♪ >>Jay, his family and crew utilize technology in bringing in their harvest. Coordinating information from that variety of sources means a more efficient use of machinery and field time. >>Well the adoption of new technologies like GPS equipment, satellite systems, computer-based technology and software, you know, the allure of it is just so impressive, it's almost as if you adopt this, you will have increased opportunities. ♪♪ >>Even with technology, a cotton harvest means long hours in the fields... using specialized equipment to handle the picking and transport. >>The front of the picker are spindles and they're pointed kind of like my fingers and they have little notches on them and those notches are rotating, and as they're rotating around on a drum they're feeding the cotton through that drum. And then we have a tractor that's tied to what we call a boll buggy, a big basket on wheels that comes through the field, comes up alongside that cotton picker and then he waits and they mechanically operate that and dump it into that big basket. ♪♪ >>A hydraulic cylinder compresses the cotton until it's tight enough to hold its shape. ♪♪ From the field, cotton will be processed at a cotton gin. The large modules will be fed into machines that clean and separate the plant material. Combing devices pull the fluffy white fibers from the plant and the seeds are collected for later use in other products. Most of jay's crop residue remains on the land: that "no-till approach" provides organic matter that reduces erosion and improves water retention. >>I think they say it takes 100 years to make one inch of topsoil so you have to be a good steward to the land too, unless you don't plan on farming here for very long. >>And Jay is quick to point out that improvements in plant varieties as well as new techniques for fertilization and pest management have given farmers a chance to produce more while leaving a smaller footprint on their land. >>There's not a whole lot of land left so we gotta do a much better job with the land that's available. It's our responsibility to preserve it, protect it, but also make it as efficient as possible knowing that the next generation; we want to turn it over to them so that they have the opportunity not only to provide food and fiber for their time but also to pass it onto their children. ♪♪ >>Cotton production in the United States began with the colonists in Virginia. It then spread south and west to Texas. When farmers began irrigating crops, cotton production expanded to Arizona and California. [sound of water dripping] >>So you've brought in the cotton crop- what's next? Well, most of us already know that the majority of cotton gets made into cloth... maybe for that skirt or dress shirt in your closet. But what happens after those big bales come in from the field? Well, our Jason Shoultz says [kitten meows] before you make clothes, you have to make yarn. >>Think about it. T-Shirts, towels, all those white socks you own, your favorite pair of jeans. Right now you're probably wearing something made from cotton. >>Well this company was started in 1916 and it started up as a thread company and then in World War II, it converted to yarn to make gabardine pants for the military. >>Anderson Warlick is the president and CEO of North Carolina's Parkdale Mills. He's seen his company grow from one plant in 1961- to 34 plants today. >>Our company today is gonna produce anywhere from 900 million to a billion pounds of yarn per year. >>This plant in Mineral Springs spins customized yarn for printable t-shirts. All of the cotton that comes through these doors is selected for specific characteristics like strength, uniformity and color. >>These bales are 500 pounds per bale and what we do is we take this bale and we take the cover off and we take the straps off. >>The bales are lined up under an automated feeder that skims the tops- removing small tufts of cotton as it goes. >>What we're doing is we're taking off of 80 to 100 different bales, so we're trying to blend out the variability that is inherent in any bale of cotton. So by taking it off of 80 to 100 that we know the characteristics of, we get a more consistent blend. >>The tufts are delivered to a machine that cleans and blends the cotton into a homogenous mixture. From there, the rotating cylinder will "comb" or "card" the tufts into individual fibers. >>What we're delivering out the front are individual fibers that are rope- in a ropelike structure that we call sliver. >>Next, 6 strands are combined into one in the drawing machine. >>And what a drawing process is intended to do is parallel the fibers. Get them from being individual fibers to aligning them... side-by-side. >>There's one last step before individual cotton strands become yarn: they will be twisted together for strength and stability. >>Once we get 'em parallel together, that machine uses a rotor to spin the yarn and what we do is we put those individual fibers in that rotor and add twist and we can make a yarn. >>This machine then spins and winds the yarn onto cones, wrapping it at more than 120 revolutions a minute. >>It is forming a yarn and the easiest way for me to describe this to you if you're not familiar with a machine like this, it's like throwing something onto the end of a tornado. And what we're throwing onto the end of a tornado is not a trailer or busses or things, but it's individual fiber. >>Cotton yarn which will then be packed, wrapped and shipped to a company that uses the material to knit or weave into t-shirts. But cotton goes into much more than just clothes. In 2007, the company acquired a firm making cotton-based consumer products. >>Other uses in our company would be cotton balls. We take the by-product waste that we take out of the yarn and we bleach it and we make a cotton ball, a cotton swab, or a make-up pad. >>The U.S. Cotton Plant in Charlotte, North Carolina recycles and re-uses cotton that didn't make it into yarn The production techniques release cotton's natural softness in items most of us find in our bathrooms or medicine chests. >>We are the largest user in this country of cotton so it's very, very important that farmers are growing plenty of it so that we have a lot to choose from but its also important that we work together, work together to improve production practices, work together to improve quality, look at different varieties of cotton. >>The mills here use a significant portion of all the cotton grown in the United States. And their additional production facilities in Latin America add to the supply... of products sold at home and abroad. >>I think cotton is a very important product for the world. Cotton employs a lot folks, gives a lot of people a lot of great opportunities, and it's a wonderful product for the consumer. ♪♪ >>We think about blue jeans as a totally American invention, but the cotton material they're made from, denim, was first created in France. Brought to this country, it was made into work pants by Levi Strauss. ♪♪ >>Alright, let's spin off, no pun intended, in a couple of directions that take cotton far from the world of clothing or blue jeans. A cotton gin will separate the seeds from the cotton fiber. While the fiber is making its way into clothing, those cotton seeds are taking a very different direction. Welcome to the Lone Star State, where cotton is king. Texas produces more cotton than any other state in the nation. And here at PYCO Industries in Lubbock, cottonseed is the primary focus of their business. >>For years they had cottonseed as a waste product There was a time when- when it was given away and people didn't need it for anything 'til they figured out that it had the oil in it. [sound of machinery] >>It can easily be said that PYCO is "squeezing out a profit" from cottonseed. This Texas firm is owned by sixty cotton gin cooperatives and specializes in a range of seed offerings made from that one time waste product. >>Right now, our oil on the crushed products carries about 53 percent of our sales dollars. >>Out of a ton of cottonseed you make about 320 pounds of oil. And so, we will crank out... we make about 720,000 pounds a day. [metal lever squeaks] >>Almost around the clock, dozens of big rigs deliver loads of cottonseed from the gins. First stop... machines that clean debris from the seed. >>When we clean it we remove basically everything, all the foreign matter with the exception of the seed. Sticks, rocks, metal, burrs. Anything that's come into the plant that's not the seed. >>The seed then heads to stripping machines called "de-linters". They remove the tiny fibers of leftover lint found on the seed. That collected "lint" ends up being used in everything from mattress stuffing to food products. >>And they're used in differing industries from papers to currency and also made into cellulose, which is used in plastics, TV screens, different things like that. >>By now the seeds look like just what they are... black hulled cotton seeds. So... next step? These machines crack open and separate the hull from the "meat" of the seed. >>Hulls are used in the cattle feeding business. It's a roughage, they use that in the feed yard. >>The remaining "heart" of the seed is smashed into flakes... ...heated and pressure treated into oily pellets called collets. Those pellets pass through a machine which finally separates the oil from the meal. >>We'll make about 900 pounds of cottonseed meal out of a ton of seed. And that's for cattle feed. It's a great protein... 41 percent protein. >>As for the oil. Shipped by rail, it goes through one more process before being sold for consumer use in everything from salad oil to frying fats. >>We have a market place that goes pretty much East Coast to West Coast. We have some potato chippers that are on the East Coast that use quite a bit of oil in making potato chips. And the Bay Area likes it for the wok frying and so forth because of the attributes that our oil has. >>Cottonseed is your daily life. And that's kind of what we look at. It's in everything that we do. ♪♪ >>An average cotton fiber is slightly more than one inch long. That fiber is a single cell... one of the largest cells found in the plant kingdom. One other fact- cotton can absorb more than 20 times its weight in water. >>Cotton is grown across the country from Alabama to California and it's a crop with a long growing season. Planting in Texas can begin in early spring, but cotton may not be planted until June in other parts of the country. Sarah Gardner says, cotton farmers aside, some other folks are busy with the crop year round. >>Cotton and cows seem an unlikely pairing when it comes to agriculture, but here on the Kleinpeter Dairy Farm in South Central Louisiana, cotton has become an essential ingredient in the production of the farm's milk and other products. A century back, Jeff Kleinpeter's ancestors raised cotton on this very land- pulling the fibers from the plant in their own cotton gin and then looking for a way to use the leftover seeds and hulls. Jeff, it was your great-grandfather who started feeding cattle cottonseed, isn't that right? >>That's correct. He hated to waste anything. We had a steam-powered cotton gin in Louisiana and the waste product was the cottonseed and he was told by a LSU professor that if we fed that to cows, we'd have the best milk in the world. That was in 1910. >>Today, a large portion of all the cottonseed produced in the U.S. is added to the feed mix of cattle and dairy cows. The makeup of the meal, seeds and hulls adds digestible protein and fiber to their diets. Now when I look at the feed down here on the ground, I can't see cottonseed but it's in there. It's a mix, right? >>It's in there. It's mixed up with- with the feed itself. That's an actual cottonseed, just like the end of a Q-tip and we fix it- dip it in there and mix it in there and fix it up for these girls and the higher a protein diet we put them on, the higher the fat content on the milk and the better the quality of the milk will be for taste and texture so we've been feeding it to our cows ever since 1910. >>While the Kleinpeters get their cottonseed from outside sources, they grow other ingredients like rye grass right on the property. >>We're mixing seven different ingredients for these cows so we really have to give them a balanced diet, not only to get great milk production but we need to take care of this animal as well, keep her healthy for as long as we can keep her because she's an asset to our family business. >>There's another approach to dairy production here that most of us never think about. The farm's 700 cows get milked in a parlor where quiet is essential. >>Quiet in the milking parlor means a cow is gonna be relaxed, she's gonna let down more milk, she's gonna milk out better, she's gonna give better quality milk for us and we believe that's the right thing to do, not only for the cow but for our customers as well. ♪♪ >>In addition to the milk, cream and other fluid dairy products, the Kleinpeters have added ice cream to their production line in a bid to expand their operation outside the immediate area. >>Well, we ship our milk and dairy products and ice cream to all of Louisiana and part of the Gulf coast of Mississippi and we're looking into Texas at this point in time so during the recession, for our company to be growing for me is a special thing. >>And while the future is on the family's radar screen, Jeff admits that the efforts of those in the past really set the tone in creating a farming operation that's sustainable today... and tomorrow. >>Sustainability is very important in our industry. That's how we feed cottonseeds today. It was a sustainable practice back in 1910 to feed something to animals that would otherwise go to waste and that's how we're still moving today, moving forward not only in the dairy farm industry but in our process and packaging as well. ♪♪ >>We call U.S. currency 'paper money' but the bills are actually a blend of 75% cotton and 25% linen. Thousands of 100 dollar bills can be made from one bale of cotton. >>We've traveled cross country to share some stories about cotton and clothing... even cattle feed. But the cottonseed oil we mentioned earlier has long been a recipe staple in many kitchens across the country and around the world. Jason Shoultz says the cotton and cooking connection is especially important to one restaurant in the Lone Star State. ♪♪ >>Okay, today we've got 150 people. We're gonna do catfish and fried chicken. >>The day starts early at River Smith's Restaurant in Lubbock, Texas where they're not only known for their fried chicken and catfish, but also for their particular method of cooking. >>We cook it in the cottonseed oil at about 350 degrees for about five minutes, and it comes out golden brown and the flavor is just unbelievable. >>Cottonseed oil has been used for cooking since the 1880s and was a key ingredient in some of the first shortening products sold worldwide. Today, the oil is used in salad oil, mayonnaise, baked goods and snack foods like potato chips. Since Texas is a major cotton growing state, Paul sees his culinary approach as supporting local farmers. >>When my customers come in, they ask where my products come from, I can tell them it comes from the South Plains. I know that my farmers did that. And two, y'know, it's helping the people that are in here buying food from me. Y'know, and if I can keep them in business, then they're gonna keep me in business. ♪♪ >>Okay guys, let's go! We're ready to go! ♪♪ >>A good portion of Paul's business is catering to community activities in Lubbock and the surrounding area. He has a fitting customer on this late summer morning- cooking for some 150 cotton growers at an annual cotton gin co-op meeting. ♪♪ Once the buffet line is set the cooking gets underway. More than a hundred pounds of chicken pieces along with catfish fillets are deep-fried to a golden brown. >>Once you pull it out of this batter, you want to knock any excess batter off, pat it a couple of times. That'll also flatten your fish out. >>As with everything in cooking, timing is essential to delivering the product to your plate. >>You can see on this chicken right here, coming out to a nice golden brown... You can see how crunchy the outside is. And the inside, we cooked to the right temperature, it's still gonna have all the juice and all the taste that it needs to have. ♪♪ >>Once the cottonseed fried food is ready for the table. >>Yes sir, we are ready. >>Patrons line up to dig into the country cooking laid out by River Smiths... ♪♪ ...which keeps the cooks hopping. >>You figure about four pieces of catfish a person, so you're looking at- we're going to do about probably 800 pieces of catfish. >>Some of the chemical compounds in cottonseed oil give it heat stability and a long shelf life: characteristics important to cooks like Josh. >>Ya know, I can feed up to 5,000- 5,500 people on just one- one stretch of cottonseed oil as long as it's been filtered properly. >>Cooking traits aside, for diners at this event the only focus is on taste. >>Well, I love River Smith's. It makes it nice and crispy, the cottonseed oil does. >>River Smith's is a long time Lubbock restaurant. We eat there quite a bit during the regular year. So anytime they come out to one of these functions, we try to be here. >>And for Paul and his crew, the end of events like this generate an opportunity to give their cottonseed oil another life outside the fryer. >>We filter the grease and take it to a bin, and then Valley Protein out of Amarillo comes and picks it up, and then they turn it into cattle feed for our ranchers around Texas. So, y'know, it's- we're giving back. Y'know, they- they come pick it up, they produce the food for the farmers, we're givin' back to the ranchers after buying it from them, y'know, it's a great thing. >>Paul will tell you that cottonseed, cooking, chicken and catfish are all part of his family's history. Just look at the mural on the wall. >>That is actually my dad. We- all of our logos on everything that we've got is "Ol' Man River" Bob Corcorran, the infamous River Smith's Catfish King, as they say... ♪♪ >>I think we can safely say that you're all caught up on cotton. Hey, before we go let's remind you that our America's Heartland website has video from all our shows and links to other information about agriculture. You'll find us at AmericasHeartland.org And if you're busy in the social media world as well, look for us on Facebook and Twitter. Thanks for coming along, we'll see you next time right here on America's Heartland. >>You can purchase a DVD or Blu-ray copy of this program. Here's the cost: To order, just visit us online or call 888-814-3923 ♪♪ ♪♪ You can see it in the eyes of every woman and man ♪♪ ♪♪ In America's Heartland, livin' close to the land ♪♪ ♪♪ There's a love for the country ♪♪ ♪♪ And a pride in the brand ♪♪ ♪♪ In America's Heartland ♪♪ ♪♪ Livin' close... close to the land ♪♪ >>America's Heartland is made possible by... >>CropLife America- Representing the companies whose modern farming innovations help America's farmers provide nutritious food for communities around the globe. The Fund for Agriculture Education - A fund created by KVIE to support America's Heartland programming. Contributors include the following:
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Channel: America's Heartland
Views: 102,033
Rating: 4.8486996 out of 5
Keywords: farming, food, agriculture, Lousiana, cotton, denim, cotton seed
Id: UzmBx5rzb3M
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 26min 16sec (1576 seconds)
Published: Mon Nov 07 2016
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