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Whole Grain Goodness
Deciding to eat more whole grains is a big step for many people. But          sometimes what is even more daunting is how to go about it. So below I          have described a few of the things we have done.        Whole Grain Goodness
The biggest step we have taken is to start grinding our own grain. We've made a few forays into the world of cooked wheat berries but I must admit that despite my best intentions, we don't eat them that way very often. So most of this page will have to do with grinding flour--how to get started and what to do with the stuff once you've got it.
Kamut -- Hard Red Wheat -- Pearled Barley -- Rye -- Spelt
Grinding Flour
We began to get into a habit of grinding any time we were standing around          talking to someone. That way we'd have flour set aside for later when          we wanted to make cookies without having to stand there for a half hour grinding first. Eventually          we broke down and bought a grinder -- a Whisper Mill made by Creative          Technologies. We didn't research our purchase. We simply went with the          electric grinder that was sold by the same company from which we'd bought          the grain (Provident Pantry).          It cost us over $200 (which floored us.... But by that time we were hooked          on freshly ground flour.) If you'd rather do a little grinder research          before shelling out your dough, you might want to check Walton Feed's           page that compares          different grinders.

 
Grinding Flour
Grinding flour sounds harder than it is and has a far greater payoff          than you'd ever imagine. You can buy ground flours made from whole grains          but you never know how long they've been sitting on the counter before          you buy them. Their flavors simply aren't as fresh as when you grind the          grain yourself and use it right away.       
We          happened upon grinding flour somewhat round-aboutly. We had been buying          our pre-ground grains in bulk at Rainbow grocery (in San Francisco), but as the Y2K "threat"          loomed we decided to buy some items (that we would use anyway) just in          case. We figured it couldn't hurt to have a few gallons of wheat, rice,          beans and popcorn lying about. We also bought a hand grinder (assuming          that if the Y2K debacle was true, then we wouldn't have electricity to          use to grind the grain.  And if an earthquake came along instead, we'd be ready for that too). When we ran out of oat flour a few months before          the New Year, we pulled out a 5 gallon tub of oats and gave the grinder          its first run.       
We found that hand grinding could be either relaxing or annoying, depending          on whether we were in a hurry or not. Our 3 year old loved to play with          the oat berries and turn the handle on the grinder. And it was impressive          when we pulled out a tub of hard red wheat to see that not all grains          grind the same. (The oats grind much quieter and more smoothly. The wheat          seemed to be at least twice as loud and a tad harder to grind as it seemed          to occasionally catch in the grinder.)       
We began to get into a habit of grinding any time we were standing around          talking to someone. That way we'd have flour set aside for later when          we wanted to make cookies without having to stand there for a half hour grinding first. Eventually          we broke down and bought a grinder -- a Whisper Mill made by Creative          Technologies. We didn't research our purchase. We simply went with the          electric grinder that was sold by the same company from which we'd bought          the grain (Provident Pantry).          It cost us over $200 (which floored us.... But by that time we were hooked          on freshly ground flour.) If you'd rather do a little grinder research          before shelling out your dough, you might want to check Walton Feed's           page that compares          different grinders.
We don't use store bought white flour at all (well, except for making play-dough and I've used it also for making pirogi) and only occasionally buy          other preground flours (such as the occasional bag of garbanzo bean flour          or quinoa flour). Our favorite general purpose flour so far has been hard          red wheat. It's packed with flavor. In fact, we've had friends beg us for          our chocolate chip cookie recipe only to have them be disappointed when          we tell them to just look on the back of a bag of Nestle's chocolate chips.           (They'd rather get a new recipe than start using better ingredients.)       
We don't make our own bread. At least, not often enough to say that we          do. (We might make bread a few times a year.) But we do make lots of cookies,          pancakes, waffles, muffins and scones. We generally go through one jar          (see the empty jar to the right of the Whisper Mill in the above picture)          every week or so.       
The          Grinding Process       
Turning berries into flour is quite simple. With a hand          grinder you pour the berries in, turn the handle and the flour comes out.          With the Whisper Mill, the process is the same though the experience is          rather different. The Whisper Mill, despite the word "whisper"          in the name, is quite loud. The flour also tends to get heated up a bit          (though not enough, I don't believe, to remove nutrients or spoil the          oils).        
With both the hand grinder and the electric one, you can          set the fine-ness (is that a word?) of the flour. In other words, if you're          grinding something like corn and you'd rather make polenta rather than          corn meal, or corn meal rather than corn flour, you can set the grinder          to do exactly that.       
Important          things to think about:        
* Berries have a habit of running for freedom. In other          words, if you can spill some, you will, no matter how careful you try          to be. So you may want to set the mill and bag/tub of berries inside a          larger tub of some sort.        
* When you grind the flour (with the mill, not by hand)          you'll end up adding a bit of flour to the air which will settle back          as a beautiful white dust all over everything in your kitchen. There are          things you can do to keep this at a minimum (like make sure the container          that the flour is shooting into is entirely closed. And don't try to grind          too much flour at once).        
* And as you transfer flour from the grinder to another          container, you may want to put newspaper underneath the whole operation          so that when you're done you can dump any fallen flour into the container          as well.       
Advantages          of Grinding Your Own Flour       
The          greatest advantage to grinding your own flour is having fresh flour. It          really does taste better. If you doubt me, then come over and try some          of my chocolate chip cookies or some of Rob's waffles. Store bought flour          is sometimes so old that it's rancid before you get it home. Whole wheat          berries can stay fresh longer than whole wheat flour. (Remember, the whole          reason that white flour became all the rage back in the early 1900's was because it was more nutritious, because it's not. It was because it will          keep fresh several times longer than whole grain flour. But as far as          I'm concerned, it doesn't matter how much longer white flour remains fresh,          it's bad for your health and it tastes like glue.)
Another advantage that crosses my mind once in awhile as          I'm grinding flour is that when I grind my own flour, I know exactly what          bugs are (or are not) in my flour. I've heard that we eat several bugs          a year that get ground into the food that we buy prepackaged. Yuck!        
You can also grind as much, or as little, flour as you need.          If you only need a half cup of some oddball flour twice a year, you can          buy the grain whole (which will keep throughout the year) but grind the          flour only when you need it (since it would probably be bad by the next          time you needed it if its something you infrequently use).       
And you can buy the grain in bulk which is cheaper than          buying the preground stuff. (Granted, you have to shell out dough for          that grinder, but if you go in on it with someone and share it, you'll          save yourself a heap of dough.)       

You          don't have to grind grain to enjoy its goodness. In fact, you've probably          already had cooked, whole berries of grain and not even given it a thought.          Brown rice is a whole grain cooked whole and steel cut oats are made from          a whole grain that is almost whole (often only chopped into halves or          thirds, not mashed or ground).        
The Joy of Cooking has a quite helpful description of grains          and how to cook them. Suggestions include toasting the grain first, cooking          the grain in broth or some other liquid besides water, and combining several          grains for flavor and nutrition. Some grains can be cooked in a relatively          short amount of time such as rice and oats. Others require presoaking          to help soften them. And grains can be eaten as is (such as in a porridge,          what we American's would call "hot cereal"), as a side dish          (as rice might be), or in a salad.        
Different grains also provide different nutrients. Amaranth          has more protein, iron, magnesium, and phosphorus than most other grains.          Oats are known for providing fiber. Quinoa (pronounced keen-wa) is a complete          protein. (Check out Gretchen's          list of grains for more in-depth descriptions.)       
          Recipes from the          low-fat vegetarian archive think apple-barley, kamut-biryani, and          quinoa-vegetable-jambalaya
Descriptions of the grains with recipes to boot
Descriptions of the grains with recipes to boot



Awwww! Look at how little your kids were here!!!
ReplyDeleteyeah, the girls were probably three there.
ReplyDeleteI am a fan of whole grain bread and also splet bread. Thanks for the info - I am friends of a spelt bakery in the UK . www.twelvetribes.com and search for the UK link.
ReplyDeleteGreat write up!
ReplyDeleteI was trying to figure out how much flour is made from how much berries. If I grind 5 poounds of berries, will I get 5 pounds of flour? what I'm really trying to do is figure out how big a bag I of whole wheat I should get for say, a year's worth of flour.
i don't know what the exact ratio is, but you definitely end up with more flour than you put in in berries. (you also don't have to sift your flour, since the purpose of sifting is to add air -- fluff up the flour. it gets fluffed up enough in the grinding process.)
ReplyDeleteHow do your store your grain, keeping it safe from bugs? We've gotten bugs in our rice before, and I can only imagine that a large tub of grain is only more likely to ship with bug larvae. So I worry that just storing it in an airtight container will not be enough. (If I get a bad bag of rice, I can contain the contamination, but not stop it.)
ReplyDeleteThanks for your great write-up!
moths are a particular problem. i buy the Cupboard Moth Trap to try to stave off an onslaught, but we still occasionally get larvae in things if they're not in sealed containers. as long as i use things quickly, we don't have a problem. and when we kept our grain in big tubs with good seals, we didn't have a problem. but when i don't use things quickly enough, then yeah, they get in our stuff and i have to toss the food. :-P that's definitely a downside of storing the grains.
ReplyDeleteMy mom always had an emergency food storage stockpile that usually consisted of a TON of wheat ready in case something happened. It's something I think I'm going to carry on with my family.
ReplyDeleteok, so this is totally a spamish link, but i think the site looks interesting. and it's not emergency essentials. so i'm leaving it.
ReplyDeleteHaha, thanks for leaving my 'spamish' comment up. I just thought maybe that would be useful info to anyone who stumbled into it. And you're right, it's definitely not emergency essentials.
ReplyDeleteThanks Meg! This is fantastic!
ReplyDelete