As Filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 13, 2001
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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549
                                    FORM 10-K


                      Annual Report Pursuant to Section 13
                     of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

                     For the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 2001

                          MIDWEST GRAIN PRODUCTS, INC.

                                1300 Main Street
                                     Box 130
                             Atchison, Kansas 66002
                            Telephone: (913) 367-1480

                       Incorporated in the State of Kansas


                           COMMISSION FILE NO. 0-17196

                               IRS No. 48-0531200

     The Company has no securities  registered  pursuant to Section 12(b) of the
Act. The only class of common stock outstanding  consists of Common Stock having
no par value,  8,203,354  shares of which were outstanding at June 30, 2001. The
Common Stock is registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act.

     The  aggregate  market  value of the Common  Stock of the  Company  held by
non-affiliates, based upon the last reported sales price of such stock on August
13, 2001, was $59,767,424.

     The  Company  has filed all  reports  required to be filed by Section 13 or
15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months, and
has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

     As indicated by the following check mark,  disclosure of delinquent  filers
pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein,  and will not be
contained,  to the best of  registrant's  knowledge,  in a  definitive  proxy or
information  statement  incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K:
[ ].

     The following documents are incorporated herein by reference:

     (1)  Portions  of  Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc.  2001  Annual  Report to
          Stockholders,  pages  17  through  36  thereof,  are  incorporated  by
          reference into Part II and contained in Exhibit 13.

     (2)  Portions of Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc.  Proxy  Statement  for the
          Annual Meeting of Stockholders  to be held on October 11, 2001,  dated
          September 14, 2001,  are  incorporated  by reference  into Part III of
          this report to the extent set forth herein.
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                                    CONTENTS

                                                                            PAGE
PART I
 Item 1.   Business..........................................................2
           General Information...............................................2
           Wheat Protein Products............................................3
           Premium Wheat Starch..............................................7
           Alcohol Products..................................................8
           Flour and Other Mill Products....................................10
           Transportation...................................................10
           Raw Materials....................................................11
           Energy...........................................................11
           Employees........................................................11
           Regulation.......................................................12
 Item 2.   Properties.......................................................12
 Item 3.   Legal Proceedings................................................13
 Item 4.   Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders..............13
 Item 4A.  Executive Officers of the Registrant.............................14

PART II
 Item 5    Market for the Registrant's Common Equity and Related
           Stockholder Matters................................................16
 Item 6.   Selected Financial Data............................................16
 Item 7.   Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
           and Results of Operation...........................................16
 Item 7A.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk..........16
 Item 8.   Financial Statements and Supplementary Data........................16
 Item 9.   Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
           Financial Disclosure...............................................17

PART III
 Item 10.  Directors of the Registrant........................................17
 Item 11.  Executive Compensation.............................................17
 Item 12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
           and Management.....................................................17
 Item 13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.....................17

PART IV
 Item 14.  Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on
           Form 8-K...........................................................17

SIGNATURES....................................................................20

FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES................................................S-1
 Report of Independent Public Accountants on Schedules.......................S-2
 Schedule VIII.  Valuation and Qualifying Accounts...........................S-3

     The  calculation  of the aggregate  market value of the Common Stock of the
Company held by non-affiliates is based on the assumption that non-affiliates do
not include  directors.  Such assumption does not constitute an admission by the
Company or any director that any director is an affiliate of the Company.

     This  report,  including  the  portions of the Annual  Report  incorporated
herein by reference,  contains forward-looking  statements as well as historical
information.  Forward-looking  statements  are  usually  identified  by  or  are
associated with such words such as "intend,"  "believe,"  "estimate,"  "expect,"
"anticipate,"  "hopeful," "should," "may" and similar expressions.  They reflect
management's  current  beliefs and estimates of future  economic  circumstances,
industry  conditions,  Company  performance  and  financial  results and are not
guarantees of future performance.  The  forward-looking  statements are based on
many assumptions and factors including those relating to grain prices,  gasoline
prices,  energy costs,  product  pricing,  competitive  environment  and related
market  conditions,  operating  efficiencies,  access to capital  and actions of
governments.  Any changes in the assumptions or factors could produce materially
different results than those predicted and could impact stock values.

                                       1

                                     PART I
Item 1.  Business.

         General Information

     Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc.  (the  Company)  is  a  Kansas  corporation
headquartered in Atchison,  Kansas. It is the successor to a business founded in
1941 by Cloud L. Cray, Sr.

     The Company is a fully integrated producer of wheat protein, which includes
vital wheat  gluten and  specialty  wheat  proteins,  premium  wheat  starch and
alcohol  products.  These grain  products  are  processed  at plants  located in
Atchison,  Kansas and Pekin, Illinois. The Company also operates a wheat protein
and wheat  starch  mixing  facility in Kansas City,  Kansas.  Wheat is purchased
directly  from local and  regional  farms and grain  elevators  and milled  into
flour.  The flour is  processed  with water to extract  vital  wheat  gluten,  a
portion of which is further processed into specialty wheat proteins. Vital wheat
gluten  and most  wheat  protein  products  are dried  into  powder  and sold in
packaged or bulk form.  The starch slurry which results after the  extraction of
the gluten and wheat  proteins is further  processed  to extract  premium  wheat
starch  which is also dried into powder and sold in  packaged or bulk form.  The
remaining slurry is mixed with corn or milo and water and then cooked, fermented
and distilled into alcohol.  The residue of the  distilling  operations is dried
and sold as a high protein  additive for animal feed.  Carbon  dioxide  which is
produced  during the  fermentation  process is trapped and sold.  As a result of
these processing operations,  the Company sells approximately 95% (by weight) of
grain processed.

     The table below shows the  Company's  sales from  continuing  operations by
product  group for each of the five years ended June 30,  2001,  as well as such
sales as a percent of total sales.

                              PRODUCT GROUP SALES


                                                                                       
                                                             Year Ended June 30,

                                    2001                 2000             1999               1998              1997
                                    ----                 ----             ----               ----              ----
                                                            (thousands of dollars)
                             Amount      %         Amount     %      Amount     %       Amount     %      Amount      %

Wheat Protein Products      $49,762     21.7      $70,912   30.6   $ 56,153    26.0   $ 42,489    19.0   $ 39,968   17.8
Premium Wheat Starch         27,907     12.2       29,186   12.6     27,173    12.6     27,791    12.4     29,935   13.3
Alcohol Products:
  Food Grade Alcohol
    Beverage Alcohol         25,005     10.9       27,728   11.9     30,373    14.1     35,934    16.1     43,118   19.2
    Food Grade               17,315      7.6       16,136    7.0     19,276     8.9     27,487    12.3     38,004   16.9
    Industrial
  Fuel Grade Alcohol         83,686     36.4       62,066   26.7     54,639    25.3     51,227    23.0     34,992   15.6
  Alcohol By-products        23,532     10.3       23,093   10.0     25,441    11.8     33,259    14.9     34,553   15.4
                             ------     ----      -------  -----    -------   -----    -------   -----    -------  -----
    Total Alcohol           149,538     65.2      129,023   55.6    129,729    60.1    147,957    66.3    150,667   67.1
                            -------     ----      -------  -----    -------   -----    -------   -----    -------  -----
    Products
Flour and Other Mill
Products                      2,034      0.9        2,759    1.2      3,046     1.4      5,017     2.3      4,163    1.8
                              -----     ----      -------   ----     ------    ----     ------    ----     ------  -----
    Net Sales              $229,241      100%    $231,880  100.0   $216,101   100.0   $223,354   100.0   $224,733  100.0
                           ========     ====     ========  =====   ========   =====   ========   =====   ========  =====


     The Company's  results for fiscal 2001 declined from the prior fiscal year.
Net  income was $2.7  million  compared  to $4.9  million  in fiscal  2000,  due
principally  to abnormally  high energy costs  resulting from a dramatic rise in
natural gas prices.  Reduced sales for the Company's vital wheat gluten, premium
wheat  starches and food grade  alcohol were also  affecting  factors.  Improved
selling prices for the Company's alcohol products,  non-operating  income from a
two year  Department of Agriculture  program that began in June, 2001 and growth
in  sales  of  specialty  wheat  proteins  were the  principal  reasons  for the
Company's profitability for the current fiscal year.

                                       2

     The bulk of the Company's  sales are made  directly to large  institutional
food and beverage  processors and distributors with respect to which the Company
has longstanding  relationships.  Sales to these customers are usually evidenced
by short term  agreements  that are  cancelable  within 30 days and under  which
products  are  usually  ordered,  produced,  sold and  shipped  within  60 days.
However, a substantial amount of the Company's fuel alcohol is sold under longer
term  contracts,  primarily  to cover  the  needs of  gasoline  refiners  during
September through April of each year. None of the Company's  customers accounted
for more than ten percent of the Company's  consolidated  revenues during fiscal
2001.

     Historically,  the  Company's  sales  have not  been  seasonal  except  for
variations  affecting  alcohol and vital wheat gluten sales.  Fuel alcohol sales
usually  increase  during the period August through March due to requirements of
the Clean Air Act which  inhibit  the sale of ethanol  in  certain  areas of the
country  during  May 1 through  September  15 each year.  Certain  environmental
regulations  also favor  greater use of ethanol  during the winter months of the
year. See "Alcohol Products- Fuel Grade Alcohol." Beverage alcohol sales tend to
peak in the fall as  distributors  order  stocks for the holiday  season,  while
vital wheat gluten  sales have tended to increase to a minor  extent  during the
second half of the fiscal  year as demand  increases  for hot dog and  hamburger
buns and  similar  bakery  products.  During the next year the  Company  expects
declining vital wheat gluten sales due to the expiration of the quota on imports
of wheat gluten into the United States. See "Vital Wheat Gluten - Competition."

     The  Company's  strategy in recent years has been to focus on the marketing
and development of specialty wheat protein and starch products for use in unique
market niches.  During 2001,  specialty  wheat protein sales increased by 24% to
approximately  23% of total  wheat  protein  product  sales.  As a result of the
expiration of the import quota on foreign wheat gluten,  the Company  intends to
intensify  its efforts to focus on developing  markets for its  specialty  wheat
proteins and starch products.  As described  herein,  the Company is eligible to
receive approximately $26 million over the next two years under a new government
program  designed to assist  manufacturers  of wheat gluten in their  transition
from the historical vital wheat gluten business to new markets. These funds will
be used for  research,  marketing,  promotional  and  capital  costs  related to
specialty  wheat  protein and starch  products  and should help  accelerate  the
Company's growth in these markets.

     For further information,  see the Consolidated  Financial Statements of the
Company and  Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of the  Company's  Financial
Condition and Results of  Operations  which appear at pages 18 through 24 of the
Annual Report.

Wheat Protein Products

     The  Company's  wheat  protein  products  consist of vital wheat gluten and
specialty wheat proteins that are derived from vital wheat gluten. During fiscal
2001, sales of vital wheat gluten declined by  approximately  39% over the prior
year due primarily to pricing pressures from subsidized  European Union ("E.U.")
producers.  As noted above,  the Company's  overall  strategy is to focus on the
marketing and development of specialty wheat protein and starch products for use
in unique market  niches.,  and specialty  wheat  proteins are accounting for an
increasing share of the Company's total wheat protein sales. During fiscal 2001,
specialty  wheat protein sales increased by 24%, to  approximately  23% of total
wheat  protein  sales.  That share is expected  to  continue to increase  due to
increased  marketing,  customer  recognition  of the  advantages of these unique
products and an increase in capacity,  as well as declining sales of vital wheat
gluten  resulting  from an  increase  in supplies  and  pricing  pressures  from
European Union producers.

     Vital Wheat Gluten.  Vital wheat gluten is a free-flowing  light tan powder
which contains approximately 75% to 80% protein. Its vitality,  water absorption
and retention and film-forming  properties make it desirable as an ingredient in
many food  products.  It is the only  commercially  available  high protein food
additive which  possesses  vitality.  The vitality of the Company's  vital wheat
gluten results from its elastic and cohesive characteristics when added to dough
or otherwise reconstituted with water.

     Vital wheat gluten is added by bakeries and food processors to baked goods,
such as breads, and to pet foods, cereals, processed meats, fish, and poultry to
improve the nutritional  content,  texture,  strength,  shape, and volume of the
product.  The neutral flavor and color of wheat gluten also  enhances,  but does
not change, the flavor and color of

                                       3


food. The  cohesiveness  and elasticity of the gluten enables the dough in wheat
and other high protein breads to rise and to support added ingredients,  such as
whole cracked grains, raisins and fibers. This allows the baker to make an array
of  different  breads by varying  the gluten  content of the dough.  Vital wheat
gluten is also added to white breads, hot dog buns and hamburger buns to improve
the strength and  cohesiveness of the product.  For example,  vital wheat gluten
provides greater hinge strength for hot dog buns.

     The Company  produces vital wheat gluten from modernized  facilities at the
Atchison and Pekin  plants.  It is shipped  throughout  the  continental  United
States  in bulk and in 50 to 100  pound  bags to  distributors  and also is sold
directly to major food processors and bakeries.

     Specialty Wheat Proteins. In recent years the Company began the development
of a number of specialty  wheat  proteins  for food and  non-food  applications.
Specialty  wheat  proteins are derived from vital wheat gluten through a variety
of  proprietary  processes  which change the molecular  structure of vital wheat
gluten. Food application wheat proteins include gliadin,  glutenin,  products in
the Wheatex(TM)  and FP(TM) series and Pasta  Power(TM).  Non-food  applications
include wheat proteins designed for use primarily in cosmetics and personal care
products  and in  biodegradable  gluten  protein  that can be  molded  to form a
variety  of  biodegradable   plastic-like  objects.   Specialty  wheat  proteins
generally  compete with other  ingredients and modified  proteins having similar
characteristics.  Although a number of the  specialty  wheat  proteins have been
launched, additional products are in the test marketing or development stage.

     Food Applications

     o Gliadin and Glutenin are the two principal  molecules  that make up vital
       wheat gluten.  The Company's  patented  process enables the separation of
       each for a variety of end uses.  Glutenin,  a large molecule  responsible
       for the elastic  character of vital wheat gluten,  increases the strength
       of bread  doughs,  improves  the  freeze-thaw  characteristics  of frozen
       doughs and may be used as a functional  protein source in beef jerky-type
       products,  as well as in meat extension.  Gliadin, the smaller of the two
       molecules, is soluble in water and other liquids,  including alcohol, and
       is  responsible  for  the  viscous  properties  of  wheat  gluten.  Those
       characteristics  make it ideal to improve  the  texture  of  noodles  and
       pastas.  Gliadin is also used in a number of cosmetics  and personal care
       products as described below under "Non-Food Applications."

     o Wheatex(TM)Series  consists of texturized  wheat proteins made from vital
       wheat  gluten by changing  it into a pliable  substance  through  special
       processing. The resulting solid food product can be further enhanced with
       flavoring and coloring and  reconstituted  with water.  Texturized  wheat
       proteins are used for meat,  poultry and fish substitutes,  extenders and
       binders. Wheatex(TM)mimics the textural characteristics and appearance of
       meat,  fish and poultry  products.  It is available in a variety of sizes
       and colors and can be easily formed into patties,  links or virtually any
       other  shape  the  customer  requires.  Because  of  its  neutral  taste,
       Wheatex(TM)will  not alter flavors that are added to the product. It also
       has excellent water-binding  capacities for the retention of natural meat
       juices. Wheatex(TM)is presently being sold for applications in vegetarian
       and extended meat products.

     o FP(TM) Series.  The Midsol FP(TM) series of products consist of specialty
       wheat proteins,  each tailored for use in a variety of food applications.
       These  include  proteins  that  can be used to form  barriers  to fat and
       moisture penetration to enhance the crispness and improve batter adhesion
       in fried  products,  increase the  freshness and shelf life of frozen and
       refrigerated dough products after they are baked,  effectively bond other
       ingredients in vegetarian patties and extended meat products, and fortify
       nutritional drinks.

     o Pasta  Power(TM) is a specialty  wheat  protein that is a  cost-effective
       replacement  for whole  eggs and egg whites and  enhances  the  strength,
       texture,  quality and  functionality of fresh,  frozen and flavored pasta
       products.  The  added  strength  enables  the  canning  of pasta  and its
       treatment with spices without significant  deterioration of the noodle or
       other  pasta  product,  as in the case of canned  spaghetti  and  similar
       products.

                                       4


Non-Food Applications

     o Cosmetics and Personal Care Products.  Specialty  wheat proteins  include
       proteins that have been hydrolyzed or otherwise altered to become soluble
       in water and other  liquids.  This  enables  their use in food as well as
       non-food  cosmetic  applications  such as  hair  sprays,  shampoos,  skin
       lotions and similar  products.  These include Foam Pro(TM),  a hydrolyzed
       wheat  protein  that has been  developed  as a foam  booster to naturally
       enhance  detergent  systems such as shampoos,  liquid hand soaps and bath
       and shower gels;  Aqua  Pro(TM)II WAA, a solution of amino acids produced
       from natural wheat proteins that helps provide excellent moisturizing and
       film forming properties in both hair and skin systems; Aqua Pro(TM)11 WP,
       an  additive   for  shampoo;   Aqua   Pro(TM)QWL,   which   enhances  the
       functionality  of hair  conditioners;  and Aqua  Pro(TM)II WG, which is a
       gliadin  formulation  that  is  used  in  hair  and  skin  cleansers  and
       conditioners.

     o Biodegradable    Gluten/Starch    Resins.    Polytriticum(TM)   200   and
       Polytriticum(TM)   2000  are  the  Company's   environmentally   friendly
       biodegradable  gluten/starch  resins  that can be  molded  to  produce  a
       variety of plastic-like  objects.  Polytriticum(TM)  200 may be used as a
       commercial  raw  material  for the  production  of pet  treats and chews.
       Polytriticum(TM)  2000 has been  developed for use in  disposable  eating
       utensils, golf tees, food and feed containers and similar type vessels.

     In February of 2001, the Company  acquired a  state-of-the-art  facility in
Kansas City, Kansas for $6.5 million which is principally dedicated to producing
Wheatex(TM).  The acquisition has allowed the Company to forego earlier plans to
construct  a  Wheatex(TM)  plant at a similar  cost.  The  Company  expects  the
acquisition  will allow it to increase the production of textured wheat proteins
and bio-polymers at an accelerated  rate. Also, the Company  anticipates that in
addition to providing more space than was incorporated into the design for a new
plant,  the facility will provide greater  flexibility for producing other lines
of value-added specialty wheat proteins.

     In July of 2001,  the  Company  received  the first $17  million  out of an
expected  total of  approximately  $26 million that it has been awarded  under a
Bush  Administration  program  intended  to enable the gluten  industry  to move
forward in the face of subsidized  and protected  competition  from the European
Union. See "Competition - Vital Wheat Gluten". The Company will use the funds to
pay certain  capital,  research,  marketing and  promotional  costs  incurred in
developing  products and markets for value-added wheat gluten, or wheat protein,
and wheat starch products.

     The Company believes that its wheat protein processing operations produce a
quality of vital wheat gluten and specialty  wheat proteins that are equal to or
better  than that of any others on the  market.  The  Company's  location in the
center of the United  States grain belt,  its  production  capacity and years of
operating experience,  enable it to provide a consistently high level of service
to customers.

     Competition-Vital  Wheat Gluten. The Company's principal competitors in the
U.S.  vital wheat  gluten  market  consist  primarily  of three  other  domestic
producers  and  producers in the E.U.,  Australia  and certain  other  regulated
countries  (the "Foreign  Exporters").  Between June 30, 1994 and June 30, 1998,
the E.U. took an increasingly large share of the U.S. gluten market.  Imports of
wheat gluten  shipped into the United States from the E.U.  during the crop year
ended June 30, 1995,  were  approximately  51.9 million  pounds.  Those  imports
increased to 70.2 million  pounds in the crop year ending June 30, 1996, to 91.1
million pounds in the crop year ending June 30, 1997, and to 97.5 million pounds
in the crop year ending June 30, 1998, for an aggregate  increase of 88%. Due to
the  imposition of import quotas  beginning on June 1, 1998,  U.S.  Customs data
shows that E.U. imports declined to 65.5 million pounds in the quota year ending
May 31,  1999,  to 45.8  million  pounds  (excluding  Poland) for the quota year
ending May 31, 2000,  but  increased  to 61.9 million  pounds for the quota year
ending May 31, 2001.  Because the quota has expired,  as  discussed  below,  the
Company expects that future imports will approach or exceed pre-quota levels and
that U.S. producers will have difficulty  effectively  competing with subsidized
producers in the sale of vital wheat gluten.

     Vital wheat gluten is considered a commodity and therefore  competition  is
based  primarily  upon price.  Since the increasing  surge of large,  subsidized
volumes of E.U. wheat gluten into the U.S.,  vital wheat gluten prices have been
primarily  affected by (i) excess  E.U.  capacity,  (ii) high  tariff  barriers,
subsidies and other protective measures ("Subsidies") provided to E.U. exporters
by their host governments, (iii) low U.S. tariffs and (iv) gluten import quotas.

                                       5


The Subsidies and low U.S.  tariffs  encouraged  E.U.  producers to expand wheat
starch and wheat gluten  production  capacity and to continue the development of
even greater capacities. Based on industry sources, from January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 2000, an estimated 160 million pounds of additional  E.U.  capacity
were completed.  Additional capacity may have been added subsequently.  In light
of the expiration of the import quota on vital wheat gluten, it is expected that
a majority  of the excess  wheat  gluten  production  from these  plants will be
targeted for shipment to the U.S.

     The Wheat  Gluten  Industry  Council  of the  United  States,  of which the
Company is a  principal  supporter,  has engaged in a number of  initiatives  to
combat the surge in subsidized  E.U. wheat gluten.  Initially,  the Wheat Gluten
Industry Council attempted to establish equal  opportunity,  or a "level playing
field", in the U.S. market through negotiations under a Grains Agreement between
the E.U. and the United States. A lack of meaningful discussions was followed by
an action under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974.  Following a further round
of unsatisfactory  discussions in connection with that action,  the Wheat Gluten
Council   initiated  a  second  proceeding  on  September  19,  1997,  with  the
International  Trade  Commission  of the United  States under section 201 of the
Trade Act of 1974 (the "Section 201 Proceeding").

     The  Section  201  Proceeding  met with  success  during the second half of
fiscal 1998. On March 18, 1998, the International Trade Commission  submitted to
President Clinton a unanimous  affirmative  determination  that imports of wheat
gluten were being imported into the United States in such  increased  quantities
as to be a substantial  cause of serious  injury to the domestic  industry.  The
International Trade Commission also recommended to the President that a quota be
placed on imports of  foreign  wheat  gluten.  As a result of that  finding  and
recommendation  and  pursuant  to  Section  203 of the  Trade  Act of 1974,  the
President issued  Proclamation  7103 on May 30, 1998. The  Proclamation  imposed
annual quantitative  limitations for three years on imports of wheat gluten from
the E. U. and other  Foreign  Exporters at an amount equal to the total  average
imports of wheat gluten shipped into the United States by the Foreign  Exporters
during the three crop years ended June 30,  1995.  The  aggregate  quota for the
first  year was 126.8  million  pounds.  Annual  increases  in that quota of six
percent prevailed in the second year and in the third year. Due to violations of
the quota by the E.U.  during  the first  quota  year,  the  President  issued a
proclamation  on May 29, 1999,  that reduced the E.U.'s second year quota by the
amount of illegally  shipped gluten in the first year and placed in effect other
measures designed to preclude further violations.  Due to the importation of the
EU's entire annual amount  allowed in the first quarter of the second quota year
and the shipment of large  quantities  of gluten  through  Poland (a  previously
exempt  country),  the President in May 2000, took further  action.  That action
restricted  shipment of the annual  amount to one fourth of the annual amount in
each of the four quarters of the quota year.  The action removed Poland from the
list of exempted  countries.  The quotas for "goods  entered,  or withdrawn from
warehouse for consumption, on or after June 1, 2000" in millions of pounds were,
per quarter, beginning June 1, 2000:
                                           Per Quarter
                                   --------------------
                 Australia         17.525 million pounds
        European Community         15.175 million pounds
           Other Countries          2.925 million pounds

     In fiscal 2000, a proceeding was commenced in the World Trade  Organization
("WTO")  to set  aside the  action of the ITC in  establishing  the  quota.  The
essential basis of the claim was that the ITC and the President had not used the
appropriate  methodology in determining  the cause of serious injury to the U.S.
industry. Subsequently, the EU imposed a special duty on a portion of imports of
corn gluten from the United States. On June 28, 2000, the WTO dispute resolution
panel ruled in favor of the claim.  The decision was appealed by the U.S.  Trade
Representative.

     On appeal,  the  Appellate  Body of the World  Trade  Organization  ("WTO")
confirmed  the  ruling  that the  safeguard  action  implementing  the quota was
inconsistent  with the United  States'  obligations  under the WTO  Agreement on
Safeguards.  However, the U.S.  International Trade Commission ("USITC") had the
opportunity  to bring the safeguard  into  conformity  with the  Appellate  Body
decision,  and the quota  remained  in place  until its  scheduled  May 31, 2001
termination date.

     At the request of the Wheat Gluten Industry  Council of the U.S., the USITC
recommended  a two-year  extension  of the quota,  based on grounds that through
circumvention  and  similar  tactics,   E.U.   producers  had  deliberately

                                       6


and effectively prevented the U.S. wheat gluten industry from receiving the full
extent of relief that the quota  intended.  However,  in lieu of  extending  the
quota, the Bush  Administration  announced a program to provide the wheat gluten
industry up to $40 million over two years to help it complete its  transition to
competitiveness.  The Company is eligible for  approximately  $26 million of the
total  industry  allotment  and has received  approximately  $17 million for the
first  year of the  program.  The  program  is  administered  through  the  U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Commodity Credit Corporation.

     Since the  imposition of the quota,  the Company has focused its efforts on
developing and increasing the production and sales of specialty  wheat proteins.
These  are  niche  products  that  are  expected  to be  able  to  compete  more
effectively  with increased  foreign imports.  Although  additional quota relief
would have been helpful,  the Commodity  Credit  program  supports the Company's
strategy  and  should  strengthen  its  efforts  to move  increasingly  into the
development,  production  and  marketing  of  value  added  wheat  proteins  and
starches.  However,  there can be no assurance  that the Company will be able to
compete  effectively  in a market that is  inundated  with low cost,  subsidized
foreign gluten.

     The   Company's   sales  of  vital  wheat  gluten   during  2001   declined
approximately  39% below  gluten  sales in fiscal  2000 as the  Company  reduced
production due to increased pricing pressures from subsidized E.U. producers.

Premium Wheat Starch

     Wheat starch constitutes the  carbohydrate-bearing  portion of wheat flour.
The Company  produces a pure white premium wheat starch powder by extracting the
starch from the starch slurry,  substantially free of all impurities and fibers,
and then by spray, flash or drum drying the starch. Premium wheat starch differs
from low grade or B wheat  starches,  which are extracted  along with impurities
and  fibers  and  are  used   primarily  as  a  binding  agent  for   industrial
applications,  such as the manufacture of charcoal briquettes.  The Company does
not produce low grade or B starches because its integrated processing facilities
are able to process the slurry  remaining  after the extraction of premium wheat
starch  into  alcohol,  animal feed and carbon  dioxide.  Premium  wheat  starch
differs from corn starch in its granular  structure,  color,  granular  size and
name identification.

     A substantial portion of the Company's premium wheat starch is also altered
during  processing  to produce  certain  unique  modified  and  specialty  wheat
starches designed for special applications in niche markets.

     The Company's premium wheat starches are used primarily as an additive in a
variety of food products to affect their appearance, texture, tenderness, taste,
palatability, cooking temperature, stability, viscosity, binding and freeze-thaw
characteristics.  Important  physical  properties  contributed  by wheat  starch
include  whiteness,  clean  flavor,  viscosity  and texture.  For  example,  the
Company's  starches are used to improve the taste and mouth feel of cream puffs,
eclairs,  puddings,  pie fillings,  breadings and batters;  to improve the size,
symmetry and taste of angel food cakes; to alter the viscosity of soups,  sauces
and gravies;  to improve the freeze-thaw  stability and shelf life of fruit pies
and other frozen foods; to improve moisture retention in microwavable foods; and
to add stability and to improve  spreadability in frostings,  mixes,  glazes and
sugar coatings.  The Company's modified and specialty starches are also sold for
a number of  industrial  and non-food  applications,  which  include uses in the
manufacture of adhesives, paper coatings and carbonless paper.

     The Company's  premium wheat starch is sold  nationwide to food  processors
and distributors and for export,  with the bulk of international  sales going to
Japan, Mexico and East Asian countries which do not have wheat-based economies.

     The  Company  believes  that it is the largest  producer  of premium  wheat
starch in the United  States.  Although  wheat starch enjoys a relatively  small
portion of the total United  States starch  market,  the market is one which has
experienced substantial growth over the years. Growth in the wheat starch market
reflects a growing  appreciation for the unique  characteristics of wheat starch
which  provide it with a number of advantages  over corn and other  starches for
certain  baking  and other end  uses.  The  Company  has  developed  a number of
different  modified and specialty wheat  starches,  and continues to explore the
development of additional  starch products with the view to increasing  sales of
value added modified and specialty starches.

                                       7


     Premium wheat starch competes  primarily with corn starch,  which dominates
the United  States  market.  Competition  is based upon price,  name,  color and
differing granular and chemical characteristics which affect the food product in
which it is used. Premium wheat starch prices usually enjoy a price premium over
corn  starches and low grade wheat  starches.  Wheat  starch price  fluctuations
generally track the  fluctuations in the corn starch market,  except in the case
of modified and specialty wheat  starches.  The wheat starch market also usually
permits  pricing  consistent  with costs which  affect the  industry in general,
including increased grain costs. The Company's strategy is to market its premium
wheat  starches in special  market  niches where the unique  characteristics  of
premium  wheat  starch or one of the  Company's  modified  and  specialty  wheat
starches are better suited to a customer's requirements for a specific use.

     Starch  sales  for 2001  declined  slightly  from  those of 2000;  a modest
decline in volume offset minimal price increases for the Company's starches.

Alcohol Products

     The Company's  Atchison and Pekin plants process corn and milo,  mixed with
the starch slurry from gluten and starch processing operations,  into food grade
alcohol, fuel grade alcohol, animal feed and carbon dioxide.

     Food grade alcohol, or grain neutral spirits,  consists of beverage alcohol
and  industrial  food grade alcohol that are distilled to remove all  impurities
and all but  approximately  5% of the water  content to yield high  quality  190
proof  alcohol.  Fuel grade  alcohol,  or  "ethanol,"  is a lower grade of grain
alcohol  that is  distilled  to remove  all  water to yield  200  proof  alcohol
suitable for blending with gasoline.

     Food Grade Alcohol

     Beverage Alcohol Food grade beverage  alcohol  consists  primarily of grain
neutral spirits and gin. Grain neutral spirits is sold in bulk or processed into
vodka and gin and sold in bulk  quantities  at various proof  concentrations  to
bottlers and rectifiers, which further process the alcohol for sale to consumers
under numerous labels.

     The Company  believes that in terms of fiscal 2001 net sales,  it is one of
the three  largest bulk sellers of grain neutral  spirits,  vodka and gin in the
United  States.  The Company's  principal  competitors  in the beverage  alcohol
market are Grain  Processing  Company  of  Muscatine,  Iowa and  Archer  Daniels
Midland of Decatur, Illinois. Beginning in 1997, competition in beverage markets
increased significantly as producers of fuel grade alcohol converted portions of
fuel grade production into food grade production. Competition is based primarily
upon  price  and  service,  and in the  case of gin,  formulation.  The  Company
believes that the centralized  location of its Illinois and Kansas  distilleries
and the  capacity  of its dual  production  facilities  combine to  provide  the
Company with a customer service advantage within the industry.

     Food  Grade  Industrial  Alcohol  Food grade  alcohol  which is not sold as
beverage  alcohol is  marketed  as food  grade  industrial  alcohol.  Food grade
industrial  alcohol is sold as an  ingredient  in foods (e.g.,  vinegar and food
flavorings), personal care products (e.g., hair sprays and deodorants), cleaning
solutions, biocides, insecticides, fungicides, pharmaceuticals, and a variety of
other products. Although grain alcohol is chemically the same as petroleum-based
or synthetic alcohol,  certain customers prefer a natural  grain-based  alcohol.
Food  grade  industrial  alcohol  is sold in tank  truck or rail car  quantities
direct to a number of  industrial  processors  from both the  Atchison and Pekin
plants.

     The Company is a minor  competitor  in the total United  States  market for
food  grade  industrial  alcohol,  which  is  dominated  by  petroleum-based  or
synthetic alcohol.  Food grade industrial alcohol prices are normally consistent
with prices for synthetic industrial alcohol.

     Food grade industrial and beverage alcohol sales increased by approximately
$2.2 million  during 2001 over 2000.  Improved  selling  prices more than offset
declined  unit volume  which  resulted  largely from the  Company's  decision to
reduce export sales.

                                       8


     During the year, the Company took several  initiatives  to improve  alcohol
production.  In the first quarter of the fiscal year, the Company  completed the
installation  of new  distillery  columns  to  replace  older  equipment  at its
Atchison,  Kansas  plant,  which permit the  realization  of improved food grade
alcohol production efficiencies at that location.  During the third quarter, the
Company's  Board of  Directors  approved a $2.1 million  distillery  improvement
project at the  Atchison  plant.  Expected  to be  completed  early in the third
quarter of 2002,  the project is designed  to enhance the  Company's  production
capabilities for both food grade and fuel grade alcohol. In June 2001, the Board
of  Directors  approved  a plan  for  installation  of a new  feed  drier at the
Company's Pekin, Illinois plant. Expected to be completed in late fiscal 2002 at
a cost of  approximately  $5  million,  the new  drier  should  improve  alcohol
production efficiencies at the Pekin plant.

     Fuel Grade Alcohol

     Fuel grade  alcohol,  which is commonly  referred  to as  ethanol,  is sold
primarily for blending with gasoline to increase the oxygen and octane levels of
the gasoline. As an octane enhancer,  ethanol can serve as a substitute for lead
and petroleum based octane enhancers. As an oxygenate,  ethanol permits gasoline
to meet certain environmental  regulations and laws that regulate air quality by
reducing carbon  monoxide,  hydrocarbon  particulates  and other toxic emissions
generated from the burning of gasoline  ("toxics").  Because ethanol is produced
from grain, a renewable resource, it also provides a fuel alternative that tends
to reduce the country's dependence on foreign oil.

     Although  ethanol can be blended  directly with gasoline as an oxygenate to
enable it to reduce toxic air  emissions,  it also  increases the  volatility of
gasoline or its tendency to evaporate  and release  volatile  organic  compounds
("VOC's").  This latter  characteristic  has  precluded it from meeting  certain
Clean Air Act requirements for gasoline that pertain to nine of the smoggiest U.
S. metropolitan  areas during the summer months (May 1 through September 15). As
a consequence, the demand for ethanol typically increases during the period from
August through March of each fiscal year as gasoline blenders acquire stocks for
blending with  gasoline to be marketed in the period  September 16 through April
30.

     Since the adoption of the Clean Air Act,  the gasoline  industry has relied
primarily upon methyl  tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) to reduce toxic  emissions of
air pollutants to meet the  requirements of the Act and related EPA regulations.
Ethanol is also used to a lesser  extent  during the cooler  months of the year.
However,  the EPA has  recently  concluded  that the use of MTBE has  created  a
"significant  and   unacceptable   risk  to  drinking  water  and  ground  water
resources."  Concerns  have also been  raised  as to the  effectiveness  of MTBE
versus the  effectiveness  of Ethanol  as a reducer  of air  pollutants.  As the
result  of  these  concerns,  the EPA  commissioned  a "Blue  Ribbon  Panel"  to
investigate the matter and recommend solutions. In March 2000, the EPA announced
the recommendations of the Panel. The recommendations propose that the Clean Air
Act be amended to provide  the EPA with  authority  to  significantly  reduce or
eliminate the use of MTBE, and to "replace the 2 percent  oxygenate  requirement
in the  Clean Air Act with a  renewable  fuel  annual  average  content  for all
gasoline at a level that  maintains  the current  level of  renewable  fuel (1.2
percent of the gasoline  supply) and allows for  sustained  growth over the next
decade ."

     Several  states  also  have  begun to take  action to curb the use of MTBE,
including  California,  which has adopted  regulations that will require a phase
out of the use of MTBE in that state by January 1, 2003.  Based upon information
published by the Renewable Fuels Association, other states that have taken steps
to restrict or ban MTBE over the next few years  include  Arizona,  Connecticut,
Michigan  and  New  York.  In June  of  2001,  the  Bush  Administration  denied
California's  request for a waiver from the clean octane provisions of the Clean
Air Act that require  oxygenates in gasoline.  As a result of such actions,  the
Company expects that both the demand for ethanol and the capacity of the ethanol
industry  will  expand  in  the  future.   According  to  the  Renewable   Fuels
Association,  projected annual industry  production capacity is expected to grow
to 3.5  billion  gallons  by the end of  2003,  up from  the  current  estimated
industry capacity of 2 billion gallons.

     The  cost of  producing  ethanol  has  historically  exceeded  the  cost of
producing  gasoline  and  gasoline  additives,  such as MTBE,  all of which  are
derived  from fossil  non-renewable  fuels such as  petroleum.  Accordingly,  to
encourage the production of ethanol for use in gasoline,  the Federal government
and  various  states  have  enacted  tax and other  incentives  designed to make
ethanol competitive with gasoline and gasoline additives. In December, 2000, the
U.S.  Department of  Agriculture  initiated a program to provide a two-year cash
incentive  for ethanol  producers  who  increase

                                       9


their grain usage by  specifiedamounts  to raise fuel  alcohol  production.  The
Company expects to meet the program's eligibility requirements and has increased
alcohol production in the fuel area in response to the program.

     Under the internal  revenue code, and until the end of 2007,  gasoline that
has been blended in qualifying  proportions  with ethanol provide sellers of the
blend with certain income tax credits and excise tax  reductions  that amount to
up to $0.54 per gallon of ethanol that is mixed with the gasoline  (the "Federal
Tax Credit"). A mix of at least 10% ethanol by volume is required to receive the
maximum credit. Although the Federal Tax Credit is not directly available to the
Company,  it allows the Company to sell its ethanol at prices  competitive  with
less expensive additives and gasoline. From time to time legislation is proposed
to eliminate, reduce or extend the tax benefits enjoyed by the ethanol industry,
and indirectly by producers of the grain that is converted into ethanol.  During
1998  legislation  was enacted that extended the credit  through 2007,  with the
credit being reduced to $0.51 per gallon beginning in 2005.

     The Kansas Qualified  Agricultural  Ethyl Alcohol Producer  Incentive Fund,
which has been  extended  to 2011,  provides  incentives  for  sales of  ethanol
produced in Kansas to gasoline blenders.  However, after 2004 incentives will be
paid only for increased  production.  Fiscal 2001 payments to the Company out of
the fund  totaled  $360,000  for the  ethanol  produced  by the  Company  at the
Atchison plant during that year.

     The fuel grade alcohol market is dominated by Archer Daniels Midland,  with
the  Company  being  the  smaller  of a few other  larger  second  tier  ethanol
producers.  The Company  competes with other  producers of fuel grade alcohol on
the basis of price and delivery service.

     Fuel grade alcohol sales increased by approximately  $21.6 million, or 35%,
during 2001, due primarily to increased volume and prices throughout the year.

     Alcohol By-Products

     The  bulk  of  fiscal  2001  sales  of  alcohol  by-products  consisted  of
distillers feeds.  Distillers feeds are the residue of corn, milo and wheat from
alcohol  processing  operations.  The  residue  is dried and sold  primarily  to
processors of animal feeds as a high protein additive. The Company competes with
other  distillers  of alcohol as well as a number of other  producers  of animal
food additives in the sale of distillers feeds and mill feeds.

     The balance of alcohol  by-products  consists  primarily of carbon dioxide.
During the  production of alcohol,  the Company traps carbon dioxide gas that is
emitted in the fermentation  process. The gas is purchased and liquefied on site
by two  principal  customers,  one at the  Atchison  Plant  and one at the Pekin
Plant, who own and operate the carbon dioxide  processing and storage  equipment
under long term contracts with the Company. The liquefied gas is resold by these
processors  to a variety of  industrial  customers  and  producers of carbonated
beverages.

     Sales of alcohol by-products during fiscal 2001 increased by 2% relative to
2000 sales, due primarily to increased  volume resulting from increased  alcohol
production.

Flour and Other Mill Products

     The  Company  owns and  operates a flour mill at the  Atchison  plant.  The
mill's  output of flour is used  internally  to  satisfy a  majority  of the raw
material  needed for the  production  of vital wheat  gluten and  premium  wheat
starch.

     In addition to flour,  the wheat milling  process  generates  mill feeds or
"midds." Midds are sold to processors of animal feeds as a feed additive.

Transportation

     The Company's  output is transported to customers by truck,  rail and barge
transportation  equipment,  most of which is provided by common carriers through
arrangements made by the Company.  The Company leases 329 rail cars which may be
dispatched  on short notice.  Shipment by barge is offered to customers  through
barge loading facilities on the Missouri and Illinois Rivers. The barge facility
on the  Illinois  River is adjacent to the Pekin plant and owned by

                                       10


the Company. The facility on the Missouri River, which is not company-owned,  is
approximately one mile from the Atchison plant.

Raw Materials

     The Company's  principal raw material is grain,  consisting of wheat, which
is processed into all of the Company's  products,  and corn and milo,  which are
processed  into  alcohol,  animal feed and carbon  dioxide.  Grain is  purchased
directly from surrounding  farms,  primarily at harvest time, and throughout the
year  from  grain  elevators.  Historically,  the cost of grain  is  subject  to
substantial  fluctuations  depending  upon a  number  of  factors  which  affect
commodity  prices in general,  including crop  conditions,  weather,  government
programs, and purchases by foreign governments.  Such variations in grain prices
have had and are expected to have from time to time significant  adverse effects
on the results of the Company's  operations.  This is primarily due to a variety
of  factors.  From  time to time  it has  been  difficult  for  the  Company  to
compensate  for increases in grain costs through  adjustments  in prices charged
for the Company's  vital wheat gluten due to the surge of subsidized  E.U. wheat
gluten,  whose  artificially low prices are not affected by such costs. Now that
the quota has been lifted,  the Company  expects it will be more difficult to do
so. Also, fuel grade alcohol prices, which historically have tracked the cost of
gasoline, do not usually adjust to rising grain costs.

     During  fiscal  2001,  market  prices for grain  remained  reasonable.  The
average  Kansas City market  price per bushel for corn and milo was $1.88 during
2001 and $1.87  during  2000,  while the average  Kansas City market price for a
bushel of wheat was $2.87 during 2001 versus $2.59 during 2000.

     The Company engages in the purchase of commodity  futures to hedge economic
risks associated with fluctuating grain and grain products prices. During fiscal
2001, the Company hedged approximately 19% of corn processed, compared to 11% in
2000,  and 9% of wheat  processed,  compared to 22% in 2000.  The  contracts are
accounted  for as hedges and,  accordingly,  gains and losses are  deferred  and
recognized in cost of sales as part of contract  costs when  contract  positions
are settled and related  products are sold.  For fiscal 2001, raw material costs
included a net loss of  approximately  $1.2 million on contracts  settled during
the  year  compared  to a  net  loss  of  $1.3  million  for  fiscal  2000.  See
"Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis of Financial  Condition  and Results of
Operations - Market Risk" in the Annual Report.

Energy

     Because energy  comprises a major cost of operations,  the Company seeks to
assure  the  availability  of  fuels  for  the  Pekin  and  Atchison  plants  at
competitive  prices.  This  proved a  difficult  challenge  in fiscal  2001,  as
exorbitant energy costs plagued the Company during a substantial  portion of the
year,  especially  during  the  third  quarter.  For the  year as a  whole,  the
Company's  utility  costs were 45% higher than the prior year.  Although  prices
have declined recently,  during the fourth quarter they were 27% higher than the
comparable quarter in the prior year.

     All of the  natural  gas demand for the  Atchison  plant is procured in the
open market from various suppliers. Depending on existing market conditions, the
Company has the ability to transport  the gas through a gas pipeline  owned by a
wholly-owned  subsidiary  of the Company.  The Atchison  boilers may also be oil
fired.

     In 1995 the Company entered into a long-term  arrangement  with an Illinois
utility to satisfy  the energy  needs of the Pekin,  Illinois  plant.  Under the
arrangement,  the  utility  constructed  a new  gas  fired  electric  and  steam
generating  facility on ground leased from the Company.  The utility sells steam
and electricity to the Company,  generally at fixed rates, using gas procured by
the Company.

     In order to control energy costs, the Company has a risk management program
whereby at  pre-determined  prices,  the Company will  purchase a portion of its
natural gas requirements for future delivery.

Employees

     As of June 30, 2001, the Company had 416 employees, 268 of whom are covered
by two collective  bargaining  agreements  with one labor union.  One agreement,
which expires on August 31, 2002,  covers 178  employees at the




Atchison  Plant.
The other agreement,  which expires in November 2002, covers 90 employees at the
Pekin plant. As of June 30, 2000, the Company had 433 employees.

     The Company  considers its relations  with its personnel to be good and has
not experienced a work stoppage since 1978.

Regulation

     The  Company's  beverage  and  industrial  alcohol  business  is subject to
regulation  by the Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco  and  Firearms  ("BATF")  and the
alcoholic  beverage  agencies  in  the  States  of  Kansas  and  Illinois.  Such
regulation  covers virtually every aspect of the Company's  alcohol  operations,
including production facilities,  marketing,  pricing, labeling,  packaging, and
advertising.  Food  products are also subject to regulation by the Food and Drug
Administration.  BATF regulation includes periodic BATF audits of all production
reports,  shipping  documents,  and  licenses to assure that proper  records are
maintained.  The Company is also required to file and maintain  monthly  reports
with the BATF of alcohol inventories and shipments.

     The  Company  is  subject  to  extensive  environmental  regulation  at the
federal, state and local levels. The regulations include the regulation of water
usage,  waste water  discharge,  disposal of hazardous  wastes and  emissions of
volatile  organic  compounds,  particulates  and other  substances into the air.
Under these  regulations the Company is required to obtain operating permits and
to submit  periodic  reports to  regulating  agencies.  During 1997 the Illinois
Environmental  Protection  Agency  commenced an action  against the Company with
respect to alleged  noncompliance  of the Pekin  Plant with  certain air quality
regulations. This action is further described under "Item 3. Legal Proceedings."
The Company has submitted an application to the Agency for  construction  of new
pollution  control equipment that is expected to bring emissions into compliance
with all applicable regulations.

Item 2. Properties.

        The Company maintains the following principal plants, warehouses and
office facilities:


                                                                             
                                                                     Plant Area       Tract Area
     Location                Purpose                                (in sq. ft.)      (in acres)
     --------                -------                                ------------      ----------

     Atchison, Kansas..      Principal executive offices,                494,640           25
                             grain processing, warehousing,
                             and research and quality
                             control laboratories.

     Kansas City, Kansas     Specialty protein and starch                 83,200           12.5
                             mixing facility and warehouse

     Pekin, Illinois         Grain processing, warehousing,              462,926           49
                             and quality control laboratories.

     The facilities  mentioned above are generally in good operating  condition,
are currently in normal operation,  are generally  suitable and adequate for the
business activity conducted therein, and have productive  capacities  sufficient
to maintain  prior levels of production.  The Atchison and Pekin  facilities are
owned and the Kansas City  facility is leased  from the  Unified  Government  of
Wyandotte  County,  Kansas City,  Kansas pursuant to an industrial  revenue bond
financing  consummated  in  August  2001.  The  Company  has  entered  into loan
agreements  which  contain  covenants  that  limit its  ability  to  pledge  its
facilities to others. The Company also owns  transportation  equipment and a gas
pipeline described under Transportation and Energy.

                                       12

Item 3.  Legal Proceedings.

     On April 13,  1997,  an  administrative  proceeding  was filed  against the
Company's  Illinois  subsidiary before the Illinois Pollution Control Board (the
"Board"),   by  the  Illinois   Attorney  General  on  behalf  of  the  Illinois
Environmental  Protection Agency (the "Agency").  The proceeding  relates to the
Company's  installation  and  operation  of two feed  dryers at its  facility in
Pekin,  Illinois.  The Complaint  alleges that the dryers exceed the particulate
emission  limitations  specified in the construction permits for the units; that
the dryers are being operated  without  operating  permits;  and that the dryers
were  constructed  without  a  Prevention  of  Significant  Deterioration  (PSD)
construction  permit setting forth a best available control technology  ("BACT")
emission  limitation.  The Complaint seeks a Board order ordering the Company to
cease and desist from  violations of the Illinois  Environmental  Protection Act
and associated  regulations,  assessing a civil penalty,  and awarding the state
its attorneys fees.

     The Company has filed an Answer before the Board  admitting that compliance
tests have shown particulate  emissions in excess of the limits set forth in the
construction permits, but denying the remainder of the State's claims. Since the
time  operational  problems were discovered with the dryers'  pollution  control
equipment,  the Company has been conferring and  negotiating  with the Agency on
the issues  involved  in the  Complaint.  The  Company  and the Agency have been
conducting  air modeling to support the  construction  of new pollution  control
equipment for the dryers, at an estimated cost of approximately $1.0 million. It
is anticipated  that the new equipment will bring emissions into compliance with
all applicable  limitations.  Once the modeling is complete, the Company expects
to obtain permission from the Agency to construct this equipment.

     Proceedings  under the Complaint are being held in abeyance by agreement of
the  parties  pending  completion  of the air  modeling  and  completion  of the
Company's compliance activities.  Once compliance has been achieved, the Company
anticipates  negotiating a settlement  of the  remainder of the State's  claims.
Based on the circumstances and a preliminary review of decisions by the Board in
air  pollution  matters,  the Company does not believe that any such  settlement
will be material to the business or financial condition of the Company.

     There are no other legal proceedings  pending as of June 30, 2001 which the
Company believes to be material. Legal proceedings which are pending,  including
the  proceeding  with the Illinois  Environmental  Protection  Agency  described
above,  are believed by the Company to consist of matters  normally  incident to
the business conducted by the Company and taken together do not appear material.

Item 4.  Submissions of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

     No matters have been submitted to a vote of stockholders  during the fourth
quarter of fiscal year covered by this report.

                                       13




Item 4A.  Executive Officers of the Registrant.

         Executive officers of the Company are as follows:

Name                     Age    Position
- ----                     ---    --------

Cloud L. Cray, Jr.       78     Chairman of the Board

Laidacker M. Seaberg     55     President, Chief Executive Officer

Sukh Bassi, Ph.D.        60     Vice President, Research and Development

Robert G. Booe           64     Vice President, Finance and Administration.
                                Controller, Treasurer and Chief Financial
                                Officer

Gerald Lasater           63     Vice President, Export Marketing and Sales

Marta L. Myers           41     Secretary and Administrative Assistant to the
                                President

Steven J. Pickman        48     Vice President, Corporate Relations

David E. Rindom          46     Vice President, Human Resources

Randy M. Schrick         51     Vice President, Operations

Dennis E. Sprague        55     Vice President, Alcohol and Feed Products
                                Marketing and Sales

William R. Thornton      49     Vice President, Quality Management

Michael J. Trautschold   53     Executive Vice President, Marketing and Sales

     Mr. Cray,  Jr. has served as Chairman of the Board since 1980. He served as
Chief Executive Officer from 1980 to September, 1988, and has been an officer of
the Company and its affiliates for more than thirty years.

     Mr.  Seaberg  joined the Company in 1969 and has served as the President of
the Company since 1980 and as Chief Executive Officer since September,  1988. He
is the son-in-law of Mr. Cray, Jr.

     Dr. Bassi has served as Vice  President of Research and  Development  since
1985, and Vice President Specialty  Ingredients Marketing and Sales between 1998
and 2000. He previously served as Technical  Director from 1989 to 1998 and Vice
President - Vital Wheat Gluten Marketing from 1992 to 1998. From 1981 to 1992 he
was Manager of the Vital Wheat Gluten Strategic Business Unit. He was previously
a professor of biology at Benedictine College for ten years.

     Mr.  Booe has  served as Vice  President,  Treasurer  and  Chief  Financial
Officer  of the  Company  since  1988.  He  joined  the  Company  in 1966 as its
Treasurer  and became  the  Controller  and  Treasurer  in 1980.  In 1992 he was
assigned the additional task of Vice President - Administration.

     Mr.  Lasater  joined the Company in 1962. He has served as Vice President -
Export Marketing and Sales since 1998. Previously, he served as Vice President -
Starch Marketing from 1992 to 1998. Prior to that he served as Vice President in
charge of the Wheat Starch Strategic Business Unit.

     Ms.  Myers joined the Company in 1996.  She has served as  Secretary  since
October  1996 and as  Administrative  Assistant  to the  President  since  1999.
Previously she was executive secretary for Superintendent of

                                       14


Schools for Unified School District 409, Atchison, Kansas.

     Mr.  Pickman  joined the Company in 1985. He has served as Vice  President,
Corporate  Relations since June, 2000.  Previously he was Executive  Director of
Corporate  Relations from 1999 to June 2000 and prior to that Corporate Director
of  Public  and  Investor  Relations.  Between  1985 and 1989 he  served  as the
Director of Public  Relations  and  Marketing  Administration  for the Company's
former subsidiary, McCormick Distilling Company, Weston, Missouri.

     Mr.  Rindom  joined the Company in 1980.  He has served as Vice  President,
Human  Resources  since June 2000. He was Corporate  Director of Human Relations
from 1992 to June  2000,  Personnel  Director  from  1988 to 1992 and  Assistant
Personnel Director from 1984 to 1988.

     Mr.  Schrick,  a Director  since 1987,  joined the Company in 1973.  He has
served as Vice President - Operations since 1992. From 1984 to 1992 he served as
Vice President and General Manager of the Pekin plant.  From 1982 to 1984 he was
the Plant Manager of the Pekin Plant.  Prior to 1982, he was Production  Manager
at the Atchison plant.

     Mr.  Sprague  joined the  Company in  October  1998.  He has served as Vice
President,  Alcohol and Feed Products since June, 2000. Previously, he served as
Vice President,  Corporate Marketing and Sales. Prior to joining the Company, he
held a variety of management,  sales and plant operations  positions with Joseph
E. Seagrams & Sons, Inc.

     Mr. Thornton joined the Company in 1994. He has served as Vice President of
Quality  Management  since  June  2000.  He was  Corporate  Director  of Quality
Management from 1997 to June 2000 and Corporate  Director of Continuous  Quality
Improvement from 1994 to 1997.

     Mr.  Trautschold  joined the Company in September 2000. He has served since
then as Executive Vice  President of Marketing and Sales.  He was Vice President
of  Product   Strategy  in  the  Consumer  direct  Division  of  Schwan's  Sales
Enterprises,  Inc. from 1999 to September  2000 and Vice  President of Corporate
Marketing Services for ConAgra, Inc. prior to that time.

                                       15

                                     PART II

Item 5.  Market for Registrants Common Equity and Related Stockholders Matters.

     The Common  Stock of the  Company  has been  traded on the NASDAQ  National
Market System under the symbol MWGP since November 1988.

     The following  table below  reflects the high and low closing prices of the
Common Stock for each  quarter of fiscal 2001 and 2000.  The Company paid a cash
dividend of $.10 per share in November 2000. The Board of Directors has declared
a dividend  of $.15 per share  payable on November  6, 2001 to  stockholders  of
record on October 11, 2001.  Previously,  cash dividends had not been paid since
the end of 1995.  Any future  dividends  will be paid at the  discretion  of the
Board of Directors, which will consider various factors, including the Company's
operating  results  and cash  requirements,  in making any  decision  respecting
dividends.

                                                            Sales Price
                                                   High             Low
         2001:
                  First Quarter                    $ 11.00        $ 8.25
                  Second Quarter                     10.25          8.75
                  Third Quarter                       9.00          8.25
                  Fourth Quarter                     11.25          8.13

         2000:
                  First Quarter                    $ 11.50        $ 9.38
                  Second Quarter                      9.75          7.00
                  Third Quarter                       9.25          6.38
                  Fourth Quarter                      8.63          6.13

     At June 30,  2001 there  were  approximately  787  holders of record of the
Company's  Common  Stock.  It is  believed  that  the  Common  Stock  is held by
approximately 1960 beneficial owners.

Item 6.  Selected Financial Data.

     Incorporated  by reference to the  information  under  "Selected  Financial
Information"  on page 17 of the Annual Report,  a copy of which page is included
in Exhibit 13 to this Report.

Item 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
         of Operations.

     Incorporated by reference to the information under "Managements  Discussion
and  Analysis of  Financial  Condition  and Results of  Operations"  on pages 18
through 24 of the Annual  Report,  copies of which pages are included in Exhibit
13 to this Report.

Item 7A.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.

     Incorporated by reference to the information under "Managements  Discussion
and Analysis of Financial  Condition and Results of Operations - Market Risk" on
page 23 of the Annual Report,  a copy of which page is included in Exhibit 13 to
this Report.

Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.

     Incorporated  by reference to the  consolidated  financial  statements  and
related notes on pages 25 through 36 of the Annual Report, copies of which pages
are included in Exhibit 13 to this Report.

                                       16



Item 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
         Financial Disclosure.

     Not applicable.

                                    PART III

Item 10.  Directors of the Registrant.

     Incorporated by reference to the information  under "Election of Directors"
at  pages  2  through  4  and  "Section  16(a)  Beneficial  Ownership  Reporting
Compliance" at page 16 of the Proxy Statement.

Item 11. Executive Compensation.

     Incorporated by reference to the information under "Executive Compensation"
on pages 7 through 9 of the Proxy  Statement;  the  material  under the captions
"Report of The Human Resources  Committee" on pages 11 to 13 and "Performance of
the Company's Common Stock" on page 10 is not incorporated by reference.

Item 12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management.

     Incorporated by reference to the information under "Principal Stockholders"
beginning on page 14 of the Proxy Statement.

Item 13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.

     None.


                                     PART IV

Item 14.  Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form 8-K.

     The following documents are filed as part of this report:

     (a) Financial Statements:

         Auditors' Report on Financial Statements.
         Consolidated Balance Sheets at June 30, 2001 and 2000.
         Consolidated Statements of Income - for the Three Years Ended
         June 30, 2001, 2000, and 1999. Consolidated Statements of
         Stockholders' Equity for the Three Years Ended June 30, 2001,
         2000, and 1999.
         Consolidated Statements of Cash Flow - for the Three Years
         Ended June 30, 2001, 2000, and 1999.
         Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

     The foregoing have been  incorporated  by reference to the Annual Report as
indicated under Item 8.

     (b) Financial Statement Schedules:

         Auditors' Report on Financial Statement Schedules:
         VIII - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts

     All other  schedules  are omitted  because they are not  applicable  or the
information  is  contained in the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements  or notes
thereto.

                                       17


     (c) Exhibits:

         Exhibit No.                                  Description
         -----------                                          -----------

            3(a)       Articles of Incorporation of the Company (Incorporated by
                       reference to Exhibit 3(a) of the  Company's  Registration
                       Statement No. 33-24398 on Form S-1).

            3(b)       Bylaws  of the  Company  (Incorporated  by  reference  to
                       Exhibit 3(b) of the Company's  Registration Statement No.
                       33-24398 on Form S-1).

            4(a)       Copy  of Note  Agreement  dated  as of  August  1,  1993,
                       providing  for the  issuance  and sale of $25  million of
                       6.68% term notes ("Term Notes", incorporated by reference
                       to Exhibit 4.1 to the  Company's  Report on Form 10-Q for
                       the  quarter  ended   September  30,  1993  (file  number
                       0-17196)).

            4(b)       Copy of Term Notes dated August 27, 1993 (incorporated by
                       reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the Company's  Report on Form
                       10-Q for the  quarter  ended  September  30,  1993  (file
                       number 0-17196)).

            4(c)       Copy of  Sixth  Amended  Line of  Credit  Loan  Agreement
                       providing  for the  Issuance  of a Line of Credit Note in
                       the amount of $20,000,000  (incorporated  by reference to
                       Exhibit 4.1 to the Company's  Report on Form 10-Q for the
                       quarter ended December 31, 1999 (file number 0-17196)).

            4(d)       Copy of Line of Credit Note Under Sixth  Amended  Line of
                       Credit  Loan  Agreement  (incorporated  by  reference  to
                       Exhibit 4.2 to the Company's  Report on Form 10-Q for the
                       quarter ended December 31, 1999 (file number 0-17196)).

            4(e)       In accordance with Item  601(b)(4)(iii)(A)  of Regulation
                       S-K, certain instruments respecting long-term debt of the
                       Registrant have been omitted but will be furnished to the
                       Commission upon request.

            9(a)       Copy of Cray Family Trust  (Incorporated  by reference to
                       Exhibit 1 of Amendment  No. 1 to Schedule 13D of Cloud L.
                       Cray, Jr. dated November 17, 1995).

            *10(a)     Summary of informal cash bonus plan.

            10(b)      Executive  Stock  Bonus  Plan as  amended  June 15,  1992
                       (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  10(b)  to  the
                       Company's  Form  10-K for the year  ended  June 30,  1992
                       (file number 0-17196)).

            10(c)      Copy of Midwest Grain Products, Inc. Stock Incentive Plan
                       of 1996,  as amended as of August 26, 1996  (incorporated
                       by  reference  to  Exhibit A to the  Company's  Notice of
                       Annual Meeting and Proxy  Statement  filed  September 17,
                       1996).

            10(d)      Copy of amendment to Midwest Grain  Products,  Inc. Stock
                       Incentive  Plan of 1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to
                       Exhibit 10.1 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for the quarter
                       ended September 30, 1998 (file number 0-17196)).

            10(e)      Form of  Stock  Option  with  respect  to  stock  options
                       granted  under the Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc.  Stock
                       Incentive  Plan of 1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to
                       Exhibit  10(e) to the  Company's  Form  10-K for the year
                       ended June 30, 1996 (file number 0-17196)).

            10(f)      Copy of Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc. 1996 Stock Option
                       Plan for Outside  Directors,  as amended as of August 26,
                       1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  B to the
                       Company's  Notice of Annual  Meeting and Proxy  Statement
                       filed September 17, 1996).

                                       18


            10(g)      Copy of amendment to Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc. 1996
                       Stock Option Plan for Outside Directors  (incorporated by
                       reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company's  Form 10-Q for
                       the  quarter  ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                       0-17196)).

            10(h)      Copy of Midwest Grain Products, Inc. 1998 Stock Incentive
                       Plan for Salaried Employees (incorporated by reference to
                       Appendix A to the Company's  Notice of Annual Meeting and
                       Proxy Statement dated September 17, 2000,  filed with the
                       Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  on  September  15,
                       2000).

            10(i)      Form of  Stock  Option  with  respect  to  stock  options
                       granted under the Midwest Grain Products, Inc. 1998 Stock
                       Incentive Plan for Salaried  Employees  (incorporated  by
                       reference to Exhibit 10(e) to the Company's Form 10-K for
                       the year ended June 30, l996 (file number 0-17196)).

            10(j)      Copy of amendments to Options granted under Midwest Grain
                       Products,   Inc.  Stock  Option  Plans  (incorporated  by
                       reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Company's  Form 10-Q for
                       the  quarter  ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                       0-17196)).

            10(k)      Form of Option  Agreement  for the grant of Options under
                       the Midwest Grain  Products,  Inc. 1996 Stock Option Plan
                       for  Outside  Directors,   as  amended  (incorporated  by
                       reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Company's  Form 10-Q for
                       the  quarter  ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                       0-17196)).

            10.5       Form  of  Amended  Option  Agreements  for the  grant  of
                       Options under the Midwest Grain Products, Inc. 1998 Stock
                       Incentive Plan for Salaried  Employees  (incorporated  by
                       reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Company's  Form 10-Q for
                       the  quarter  ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                       0-17196)).

            10.6       Form of Option  Agreement  for the grant of Options under
                       the Midwest Grain Products,  Inc. Stock Incentive Plan of
                       1996,  as amended  (incorporated  by reference to Exhibit
                       10.6 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for the  quarter  ended
                       September 30, 1998 (file number 0-17196)).

            10.7       Form of  Incentive  Stock  Option  Agreement  approved on
                       December  7,  2000,  for use  thereafter  under the Stock
                       Incentive  Plan of 1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to
                       Exhibit 10.1 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for the quarter
                       ended December 31, 2000 (file number 0-17196)).

            10.8       Form of  Incentive  Stock  Option  Agreement  approved on
                       December 7, 2000 for use thereafter  under the 1998 Stock
                       Incentive Plan for Salaried  Employees  (incorporated  by
                       reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company's  Form 10-Q for
                       the  quarter   ended   December  31,  2000  (file  number
                       0-17196)).

            10.9       Form  of  Memorandum  of  Agreement   Concerning  Options
                       approved  on  December  7, 2000  between  the Company and
                       certain  members  of  senior  management,  including  the
                       following  named  executive  officers:  Ladd M.  Seaberg,
                       Randall M. Schrick, Robert G. Booe, Dennis E. Sprague and
                       Dr. Sukh Bassi  incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3
                       to the Company's Form 10-Q for the quarter ended December
                       31, 2000 (file number 0-17196)).


                                       19


            *10.10     Form of Lease  Agreement  dated  as  of  August  1,  2001
                       among GE  Public Finance, Inc., The Unified Government of
                       Wyandotte County,  Kansas City, Kansas, and Midwest Grain
                       Products, Inc.

            *13        Information contained in the Midwest Grain Products, Inc.
                       2000 Annual Report to  Stockholders  that is incorporated
                       herein by reference.

            22         Subsidiaries  of the  Company  other  than  insignificant
                       subsidiaries:

                                        State of Incorporation
                       Subsidiary                                or Organization

                       Midwest Grain Pipeline, Inc.                  Kansas

                       Midwest Grain Products of Illinois, Inc.      Illinois

                       Kansas City Ingredient Technologies, Inc.     Kansas

            *23        Consent of Baird, Kurtz & Dobson.

            25         Powers of Attorney executed by all officers and directors
                       of the  Company  who have signed this report on Form 10-K
                       (incorporated by reference to the signature pages of this
                       report).

- ------------
*  Filed herewith

No reports on Form 8-K have been filed during the quarter ended June 30, 2001.


                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to  requirements  of Section 13 of the Securities  Exchange Act of
1934,  the  Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned,  thereunto duly authorized,  in the city of Atchison,  State of
Kansas, on this 13th day of September, 2001.

                                          MIDWEST GRAIN PRODUCTS, INC.

                                          By /s/Laidacker M. Seaberg
                                                Laidacker M. Seaberg, President

                                       20

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY

     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS,  that each person whose  signature  appears
below  constitutes  and appoints  Cloud L. Cray,  Jr.,  Laidacker M. Seaberg and
Robert  G.  Booe and each of them,  his true and  lawful  attorneys-in-fact  and
agents, with full power of substitution and re-substitution,  for him and in his
name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to sign any and all reports of
the  Registrant on Form 10-K and to sign any and all  amendments to such reports
and to file  the  same  with  all  exhibits  thereto,  and  other  documents  in
connection therewith,  with the Securities & Exchange Commission,  granting unto
said attorneys-in-fact and agents, and each of them, full power and authority to
do and perform each and every act and thing requisite or necessary to be done in
and about the  premises,  as fully to all  intents  and  purposes as he might or
could  do  in  person,   hereby   ratifying   and   confirming   all  that  said
attorneys-in-fact  and  agents  or any of them,  or their or his  substitute  or
substitutes, may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.

     Pursuant to the  requirements of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, this
report  has  been  signed  below  by the  following  persons  on  behalf  of the
Registrant in the capacities indicated on the dates indicated.

Name                        Title                             Date
- ----                        -----                             ----
/s/Laidacker M. Seaberg     President (Principal              September 13, 2001
   Laidacker M. Seaberg     Executive Officer) and Director

/s/Robert G. Booe           Vice President, Treasurer         September 13, 2001
   Robert G. Booe           and Controller (Principal
                            Financial and Accounting Officer)

/s/Michael Braude           Director                          September 13, 2001
   Michael Braude

/s/Cloud L. Cray, Jr.       Director                          September 13, 2001
   Cloud L. Cray, Jr.

/s/Michael R. Haverty       Director                          September 13, 2001
   Michael R. Haverty

/s/Linda E. Miller          Director                          September 13, 2001
   Linda E. Miller

/s/Robert J. Reintjes       Director                          September 13,2001
   Robert J. Reintjes

/s/Randy M. Schrick         Director                          September 13,2001
   Randy M. Schrick

/s/Daryl R. Schaller        Director                          September 13, 2001
   Daryl R. Schaller

/s/James A. Schlindwein     Director                          September 13, 2001
   James A. Schlindwein

                                       21


                          MIDWEST GRAIN PRODUCTS, INC.

                   Consolidated Financial Statement Schedules
                                   (Form 10-K)

                          June 30, 2001, 2000, and 1999

                         (With Auditors' Report Thereon)



                                      S-1


BKD, LLP
Certified Public Accountants
Twelve Wyandotte Plaza
120 West 12th Street, Suite 1200
Kansas City, MO 64105-1936

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
                         ON FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE


Board of Directors and Stockholders
Midwest Grain Products, Inc.
Atchison, Kansas


     In connection with our audit of the  consolidated  financial  statements of
MIDWEST  GRAIN  PRODUCTS,  INC.  for each of the three years in the period ended
June 30, 2001, we have also audited the following  financial statement schedule.
This  financial  statement  schedule  is the  responsibility  of  the  Company's
management.  Our  responsibility  is to express  an  opinion  on this  financial
statement  schedule based on our audits of the basic financial  statements.  The
schedule is presented for purposes of complying with the Securities and Exchange
Commission's   rules  and  regulations  and  is  not  a  required  part  of  the
consolidated financial statements.

     In our opinion,  the financial  statement  schedule referred to above, when
considered  in  relation  to the basic  financial  statements  taken as a whole,
presents  fairly,  in all  material  respects,  the  information  required to be
included therein.


                                               /s/ BKD, LLP

Kansas City, Missouri
August 1, 2001
Member of Moores Rowland International


                                      S-2



                          MIDWEST GRAIN PRODUCTS, INC.

                     VIII. VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS






                                                                         
                  Balance,         Charged to        Charged                        Balance,
                  Beginning        Costs and         to Other                       End of
                  Of Period        Expenses          Accounts     Write-Offs        Period
                  ---------        --------          --------     ----------        ------
                                                     (In Thousands)
Year Ended
June 30, 2001
  Allowance for
  doubtful
  accounts         $252           $   82                            $   82            $252

Year Ended
June 30, 2000
  Allowance for
  doubtful
  accounts          285              202               ---             235            252

Year Ended
June 30, 1999
  Allowance for
  doubtful
  accounts          285            1,037               ---           1,037            285





                                      S-3


                                                   EXHIBIT INDEX

Exhibit No.           Description
- -----------           -----------

   3(a)               Articles of Incorporation of the Company  (Incorporated by
                      reference  to Exhibit 3(a) of the  Company's  Registration
                      Statement No. 33-24398 on Form S-1).

   3(b)               Bylaws  of  the  Company  (Incorporated  by  reference  to
                      Exhibit 3(b) of the Company's  Registration  Statement No.
                      33-24398 on Form S-1).

   4(a)               Copy  of  Note  Agreement  dated  as of  August  1,  1993,
                      providing  for the  issuance  and sale of $25  million  of
                      6.68% term notes ("Term Notes",  incorporated by reference
                      to Exhibit  4.1 to the  Company's  Report on Form 10-Q for
                      the  quarter   ended   September  30,  1993  (file  number
                      0-17196)).

   4(b)               Copy of Term Notes dated August 27, 1993  (incorporated by
                      reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the  Company's  Report on Form
                      10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 1993 (file number
                      0-17196)).

   4(c)               Copy of  Sixth  Amended  Line  of  Credit  Loan  Agreement
                      providing for the Issuance of a Line of Credit Note in the
                      amount  of  $20,000,000   (incorporated  by  reference  to
                      Exhibit 4.1 to the  Company's  Report on Form 10-Q for the
                      quarter ended December 31, 1999 (file number 0-17196)).

   4(d)               Copy of Line of Credit  Note Under Sixth  Amended  Line of
                      Credit  Loan  Agreement   (incorporated  by  reference  to
                      Exhibit 4.2 to the  Company's  Report on Form 10-Q for the
                      quarter ended December 31, 1999 (file number 0-17196)).

   4(e)               In accordance  with Item  601(b)(4)(iii)(A)  of Regulation
                      S-K, certain instruments  respecting long-term debt of the
                      Registrant  have been omitted but will be furnished to the
                      Commission upon request.

   9(a)               Copy of Cray Family  Trust  (Incorporated  by reference to
                      Exhibit 1 of  Amendment  No. 1 to Schedule 13D of Cloud L.
                      Cray, Jr. dated November 17, 1995).

   *10(a)             Summary of informal cash bonus plan.

   10(b)              Executive  Stock  Bonus  Plan as  amended  June  15,  1992
                      (incorporated   by  reference  to  Exhibit  10(b)  to  the
                      Company's Form 10-K for the year ended June 30, 1992 (file
                      number 0-17196)).

   10(c)              Copy of Midwest Grain Products,  Inc. Stock Incentive Plan
                      of 1996, as amended as of August 26, 1996 (incorporated by
                      reference to Exhibit A to the  Company's  Notice of Annual
                      Meeting and Proxy Statement filed September 17, 1996.

   10(d)              Copy of amendment to Midwest Grain  Products,  Inc.  Stock
                      Incentive  Plan  of 1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to
                      Exhibit  10.1 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for the quarter
                      ended September 30, 1998 (file number 0-17196)).

   10(e)              Form of Stock Option with respect to stock options granted
                      under the Midwest Grain  Products,  Inc.  Stock  Incentive
                      Plan of 1996  (incorporated  by reference to Exhibit 10(e)
                      to the  Company's  Form 10-K for the year  ended  June 30,
                      1996 (file number 0-17196)).




   10(f)              Copy of Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc.  1996 Stock Option
                      Plan for  Outside  Directors,  as amended as of August 26,
                      1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to  Exhibit  B to  the
                      Company's  Notice of Annual  Meeting  and Proxy  Statement
                      filed September 17, 1996.

   10(g)              Copy of amendment to Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc.  1996
                      Stock Option Plan for Outside  Directors  (incorporated by
                      reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for
                      the  quarter   ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                      0-17196)).

   10(h)              Copy of Midwest Grain Products,  Inc. 1998 Stock Incentive
                      Plan for Salaried Employees  (incorporated by reference to
                      Appendix A to the Company's  Notice of Annual  Meeting and
                      Proxy Statement  dated September 17, 2000,  filed with the
                      Securities and Exchange Commission on September 15, 2000).

   10(i)              Form of Stock Option with respect to stock options granted
                      under  the  Midwest  Grain   Products,   Inc.  1998  Stock
                      Incentive  Plan for Salaried  Employees  (incorporated  by
                      reference to Exhibit 10(e) to the Company's  Form 10-K for
                      the year ended June 30, l996 (file number 0-17196)).

   10(j)              Copy of amendments to Options  granted under Midwest Grain
                      Products,   Inc.  Stock  Option  Plans   (incorporated  by
                      reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for
                      the  quarter   ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                      0-17196)).

   10(k)              Form of Option  Agreement  for the grant of Options  under
                      the Midwest  Grain  Products,  Inc. 1996 Stock Option Plan
                      for  Outside  Directors,   as  amended   (incorporated  by
                      reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for
                      the  quarter   ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                      0-17196)).

   10.5               Form of Amended Option Agreements for the grant of Options
                      under  the  Midwest  Grain   Products,   Inc.  1998  Stock
                      Incentive  Plan for Salaried  Employees  (incorporated  by
                      reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for
                      the  quarter   ended   September  30,  1998  (file  number
                      0-17196)).

   10.6               Form of Option  Agreement  for the grant of Options  under
                      the Midwest Grain  Products,  Inc. Stock Incentive Plan of
                      1996,  as amended  (incorporated  by  reference to Exhibit
                      10.6 to the  Company's  Form  10-Q for the  quarter  ended
                      September 30, 1998 (file number 0-17196)).

   10.7               Form of  Incentive  Stock  Option  Agreement  approved  on
                      December 7, 2000 for use  thereafter  under the 1998 Stock
                      Incentive  Plan  of 1996  (incorporated  by  reference  to
                      Exhibit  10.1 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for the quarter
                      ended December 31, 2000 (file number 0-17196)).

   10.8               Form of  Incentive  Stock  Option  Agreement  approved  on
                      December 7, 2000 for use  thereafter  under the 1998 Stock
                      Incentive  Plan for Salaried  Employees  (incorporated  by
                      reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the  Company's  Form 10-Q for
                      the  quarter   ended   December   31,  2000  (file  number
                      0-17196)).


   10.9               Form  of  Memorandum  of  Agreement   Concerning   Options
                      approved  on  December  7, 2000  between  the  Company and
                      certain  members  of  senior  management,   including  the
                      following  named  executive  officers:  Ladd  M.  Seaberg,
                      Randall M.




                      Schrick,  Robert G. Booe,  Dennis E.  Sprague and Dr. Sukh
                      Bassi  incorporated  by  reference  to Exhibit 10.3 to the
                      Company's  Form 10-Q for the quarter  ended  December  31,
                      2000 (file number 0-17196)).

   *10.10             Form of Lease Agreement  dated  as of August 1, 2001 among
                      GE  Public  Finance,  Inc.,  The  Unified   Government  of
                      Wyandotte County,  Kansas City, Kansas,  and Midwest Grain
                      Products, Inc.

   *13                Information contained in the Midwest Grain Products,  Inc.
                      2000 Annual Report to  Stockholders  that is  incorporated
                      herein by reference.

   22                 Subsidiaries  of  the  Company  other  than  insignificant
                      subsidiaries:

                                        State of Incorporation
                           Subsidiary                            or Organization
                           ----------                            ---------------
                      Midwest Grain Pipeline, Inc.                     Kansas
                      Midwest Grain Products of Illinois, Inc.         Illinois
                      Kansas City Ingredient Technologies, Inc.        Kansas

  *23                 Consent of Baird, Kurtz & Dobson.

   25                 Powers of Attorney  executed by all officers and directors
                      of the  Company  who have  signed this report on Form 10-K
                      (incorporated  by reference to the signature pages of this
                      report).

- ------------
*  Filed herewith

No reports on Form 8-K have been filed during the quarter ended June 30, 2001.