digitS'
Garden Master
I thought awhile about which forum to put this in. The admin can move it if'n they want.
This was the year I was supposed to grow mung beans in the garden . I can think of a few excuses but probably no one wants to read them .
I have grown them as sprouts in the kitchen and seed for that is readily available. More successfully, I have grown alfalfa sprouts. I don't know off-hand where I can get them with cream cheese in a deli sandwich. DW has taken more interest in cream cheese lately; alfalfa sprouts on the kitchen counter will be a natural progression .
Sprouted grains in bread can be delicious! I've never made it . Researching Essenne bread was more discouraging than helpful; an additional ingredient to our favorite bread recipe makes more sense. When I'm in for the alfalfa seed, wheat should be on a nearby shelf.
Something I would like to try this winter is soybean sprouts from my little garden crop that I've had the last several years. Once again I have more dry seed than I want after harvesting too little as edamame. Tofu is just tofu much fooling around ...
Here's something the experts say (link) about soy sprouts, however: "There is probably a reduction of soybean trypsin inhibitor activity during sprouting. . . This reduction is probably of little practical significance since the sprouts must still be cooked to give them their best flavor and texture."
Antinutrients are in just about all legumes but soybeans seem to have more than their share. Heat changes that and I have been a little surprised that it doesn't appear to be a lot of heat ... I don't think I've ever had soy sprouts in stir-fry but I've got the seed . Another idea is deep fat frying. I bet that's good but I'll have to think about the healthfulness of that. Still ...
Sprouts this winter? Something herbal growing in the kitchen window??
Steve
who has grown a kit of button mushrooms in the basement without much bother
This was the year I was supposed to grow mung beans in the garden . I can think of a few excuses but probably no one wants to read them .
I have grown them as sprouts in the kitchen and seed for that is readily available. More successfully, I have grown alfalfa sprouts. I don't know off-hand where I can get them with cream cheese in a deli sandwich. DW has taken more interest in cream cheese lately; alfalfa sprouts on the kitchen counter will be a natural progression .
Sprouted grains in bread can be delicious! I've never made it . Researching Essenne bread was more discouraging than helpful; an additional ingredient to our favorite bread recipe makes more sense. When I'm in for the alfalfa seed, wheat should be on a nearby shelf.
Something I would like to try this winter is soybean sprouts from my little garden crop that I've had the last several years. Once again I have more dry seed than I want after harvesting too little as edamame. Tofu is just tofu much fooling around ...
Here's something the experts say (link) about soy sprouts, however: "There is probably a reduction of soybean trypsin inhibitor activity during sprouting. . . This reduction is probably of little practical significance since the sprouts must still be cooked to give them their best flavor and texture."
Antinutrients are in just about all legumes but soybeans seem to have more than their share. Heat changes that and I have been a little surprised that it doesn't appear to be a lot of heat ... I don't think I've ever had soy sprouts in stir-fry but I've got the seed . Another idea is deep fat frying. I bet that's good but I'll have to think about the healthfulness of that. Still ...
Sprouts this winter? Something herbal growing in the kitchen window??
Steve
who has grown a kit of button mushrooms in the basement without much bother