There are very many - you need to specify in what ways you mean - appearance, nutrition, use, growth etc etc . The question is too broad
Obviously not. A malting of Wheat will give you malted wheat. A malting of Barley will give you malted barley.
The collective noun for 'wheat' is a sheaf of wheat.The collective noun for 'barley' is a crop of barley.
Rye,Barley,Wheat
Wheat has a more broader and "coarser" seed head than barley, and the tufts/bristles (called awns) are shorter in wheat than barley. Corn or Maize is a much larger cereal grass, with the seeds on a cob enclosed by a sheath. The awns are very floppy and finer than either wheat or corn. Corn can grow up to 10 feet in height whereas barley and wheat only grow up to 4 feet in height. As far as deciphering individual grains, wheat is darker in colouration than barley. Corn is much different shaped than wheat or barley, having a rounded head as opposed to the sharp oval/diamond shape that wheat and barley have.
what is the difference between barley starch and corn starch
No, barley is a completely different species of grain from wheat, just as rye and oats are.
Wheat, Wheat grass, Barley.
Whole wheat and pearled barley are the same in terms of fiber.
Wheat, Barley, Potato, Sunflower and vegetables
Wheat and barley can be found in the Midwest. More specifically, it can be found in the gold plains.
No. Barley is not wheat at all. Barley and wheat are two different species of cereal grasses belonging to the family Triticeae. Barley does belong in the wheat family, which is, as mentioned, Triticeae, but is of an entirely different species from wheat. The species name for barley is Hordeum vulgare, and the species name for wheat is Triticum aestivum. No doubt either look similar, but both are quite different from the other.
I think that one crop in the Fertile Crescent is wheat.