Jammu:Jammu is home to the world's best Basmati rice and what makes it unique from other parts of north India is its aroma which has no match all over the world.
The traditional Basmati rice is grown on over 60,000 hectares of land from the Chhamb belt on the north-west of Jammu city and is spread up to the Lakhanpur area of Kathua district, south of the winter capital.
There are over a dozen varieties of Basmati grown but a few famous brands are 370, 1121 and RH30 which are cultivated particularly in border belts of Jammu district including Ranbir Singh Pura, Suchetgarh, Bishnah, Marh and Akhnoor. The overall production of Basmati in Jammu plains goes beyond 30,000 metric tons which becomes the backbone of the economy of Jammu and Kashmir.
Talking to ETV Bharat, Director Agriculture Jammu, Arvinder Singh Reen said that Basmati rice of Jammu is a GI tagged in the general category of rice alongside Punjab of the Indian side and also Pakistani Punjab.
"What makes Jammu Basmati different is its aroma which has no match anywhere in the world. Traditionally the size of the Basmati plant here has been long and the size of rice is moderately long. Though the size of rice from Punjab and other parts of the country may be a bit long as compared to Jammu Basmati but what makes us stand way ahead of others is its aromatic nature," Reen said.
Reen informed that the department of agriculture is trying for a special GI tag for Jammu Basmati which will preserve its unique nature and buyers from all over the world will have direct access to it.
To promote the unique nature of Basmati rice, the Jammu and Kashmir Trade Promotion Organisation (JKTPO), a Public Sector Unit (PSU) of Jammu & Kashmir government headed by its Managing Director Khalid Jahangir is organising a Basmati festival in Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology (SKAUST) Jammu where besides the officials of J&K government, Basmati growers, buyers, university scientists and general public will be coming to attend it.