Catie George wrote:
I am trying hulless oats this year, have read mixed reviews on how well they hull. I think I saw hulless barley also available, Kate?
I will also be planting flour corn, which should be relatively easy to process ( probably wont nixtamalize) , and am trying quinoa and amaranth, maybe millet, and some beans. All of these are things I use as 'flour'.
Just a little of each to see what grows well and how easy it is to process.
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Joseph Lofthouse wrote:There are many hulless varieties of wheat, barley, and oats that are easily threshed just by walking on them, hitting them with a stick, or rubbing against a screen. Followed by winnowing, and they are ready to eat.
Landrace Gardening, author
World Tomato Society, ambassador
Open Source Plant Breeding Forum, founder
Landrace Gardening, author
World Tomato Society, ambassador
Open Source Plant Breeding Forum, founder
Anna Marie Spackman wrote:
Catie George wrote:
I am trying hulless oats this year, have read mixed reviews on how well they hull. I think I saw hulless barley also available, Kate?
I will also be planting flour corn, which should be relatively easy to process ( probably wont nixtamalize) , and am trying quinoa and amaranth, maybe millet, and some beans. All of these are things I use as 'flour'.
Just a little of each to see what grows well and how easy it is to process.
How did it go? I’m especially interested in the hulless oats. Also- what are your growing conditions like?
Joseph Lofthouse wrote:To answer the question more directly... For me, corn is an order of magnitude easier to harvest and clean than the small grains. In other words, in the time I can harvest, thresh, and clean 5 pounds of wheat for culinary use, I could harvest, thresh, and clean 50 pounds of corn.
Catie George wrote:
I find with a lot of things they grow better for me on the second year.
Ken W Wilson wrote:Grain sorghum is very easy to grow. Depending on the variety, the heads can be right at waist height for easy cutting. Drought tolerant if you don’t plant it too thick. The heads can get big if its not too thick, about a pound, I think. Birds are less attracked to the white varieties. I have grown it but never eaten it. Has anyone used it for flour?
Jan White wrote:Saw this thread pop up again and it reminded me of my bucket of unthreshed millet. I can now confirm that threshing pearl millet by hand is a pain in the ass.
There may be better ways to do it, but what I settled on was dumping the millet into a big tote bin and doing a bit of a shuffle twist dance number on it. A lot of the grain didn't release all that easily, so I did this for quite a while. I winnowed a bit in between dances to see how things were going. Slow.
Also turns out that there's a bit of chaff at the base of the millet grains that stays attached on a decent number of them.
I really like how well the millet grew in truly terrible soil with no watering, so I'm going to work on it. I had a bag of seed selected from the biggest, fullest, earliest heads that I was just going to plant without cleaning. I did a quick shuffle twist on it and separated out the grain that released right away. Then I picked out all the grains that had that little bit of chaff stuck to the base. I'll plant that next year and see how it goes. Maybe a couple years of selection will give me perfectly no-tech threshing millet.
Anna Marie Spackman wrote:
Thank you for sharing! I’m curious with those conditions, how large of an area did you plant and what was your yield like?
Zone 5b/6a, alkaline soil, 12 inches of water per year. For now the goal is a water independent urban homestead with edible landscaping and food forest.
Mandrake...takes on and holds the influence
of the devil more than other herbs because of its similarity
to a human. Whence, also, a person’s desires, whether good
or evil, are stirred up through it...
-Hildegard of Bingen, Physica
Mandrake...takes on and holds the influence
of the devil more than other herbs because of its similarity
to a human. Whence, also, a person’s desires, whether good
or evil, are stirred up through it...
-Hildegard of Bingen, Physica
Caitlin Mac Shim wrote:
I found amaranth pretty easy going - just put a bag over the big seed heads when they’re ripe and shake/wack them. Then pick out the bugs! I’m not so sure how to eat the seeds though.... like quinoa?
Zone 5b/6a, alkaline soil, 12 inches of water per year. For now the goal is a water independent urban homestead with edible landscaping and food forest.
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