Showing posts with label Wheat Grass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wheat Grass. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2014

7 Great Ways to Use Wheat WITHOUT a Wheat Grinder

Another GREAT article worth putting into practice this year.

Thank You Jodi and Julie at Food Storage Made Easy

http://foodstoragemadeeasy.net/2009/10/23/7-great-ways-to-use-wheat-without-a-wheat-grinder/
 

7 Great Ways to Use Wheat WITHOUT a Wheat Grinder!


wheat-kernel-2501. Thermos Wheat
Recipe from author Rita Bingham
Bring 1 c. of wheat kernels, 2 c. water, and 1 t. salt to a boil in a medium saucepan. Pour into a heated stainless steel or glass-lined thermos bottle. Secure cap. Place bottle on side. In the morning, pour off any additional water, add butter and honey, and serve hot.

wheat-berries12. Wheat Berries
Add some of your plain dry wheat kernels to a pot of water. Bring it to a boil and cook for a few minutes. Then let simmer for about 45 minutes. Drain the wheat berries and stick them in a Tupperware container in the fridge. These are delicious to add to yogurt or to use to replace some meat in recipes. You can also use it in place of brown rice in a lot of recipes.

poppedwheat3. Popped Wheat
Take 1 cup of your cooked wheat berries (see above) and add to a frying pan of pot with two tablespoons of oil in it. Cover with a lid and cook over a hot stove shaking the pan while it cooks. After about 4-5 minutes the kernels will be nice and toasted. Put the popped wheat on a paper towel to get the extra oil off, and sprinkle with your choice of seasonings. Try it with salt, seasoned salt, garlic, barbecue salt, onion salt, cinnamon and sugar or any combination you desire. These are delicious on salads as a topping, mixed with trail mix, or as toppings for a desserts or just as a healthy snack.

wheatgrass4. Wheat Grass
Most people have heard how healthy wheat grass is for you, but most people DON’T know that you can make your own wheat grass at home for free with just a little bit of your food storage wheat. Check out this step by step tutorial on How to Grow Wheat Grass if you want to try it yourself! It looks so easy. Then you can snip bits off and add them to your fruit smoothies, or if you have a juicer you can use them in other healthy juice drinks.

cracked-wheat5. Cracked Wheat
You can crack wheat in a blender or a coffee grinder. To do it in a blender you simply put in about 1/4-1/3 cups of wheat and pulse it until it looks like little cracked kernels. These kernels will cook much faster than regular wheat, and cook up in the same way that you cook rice on the stove or in the microwave. You can use cracked wheat to make hot cereal, add it into bread, or cook it up and use as a meat filler. For more info in cracked wheat visit this post at Everyday Food Storage.

wheat-sprouts6. Wheat Sprouts
Making wheat sprouts is a different method than making wheat grass. You can sprout wheat just like any other vegetable seeds, legumes, or other grains. Make sure to review our tutorial on how to grow sprouts. Most people like wheat sprouts to be very small, just barely sprouted. These are delicious to throw on salads or to add into your whole wheat bread for a little extra texture and flavor.

7. Blender Wheat Flour
If you are cooking a recipe for something like pancakes or waffles, you can EASILY use your whole wheat kernels, mix the whole recipe in your blender, and pour it straight from there onto a griddle or waffle-maker. Just make sure to add the liquid for your recipe into the blender, then add in your wheat kernels and blend for about 5 minutes. Then add the rest of the ingredients. We blogged about trying Blender Wheat Pancakes and we also have a delicious Corn Cakes Recipe you could try in the blender too.

Please note: Don’t go trying all of these ideas all at once! If you add TOO MUCH wheat into your diet TOO FAST it can give you digestion problems, and we promise you don’t want to have that ;)

Visit foodstoragemadeeasy.net for more information about food storage.
They know what they are talking about!

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Words of Wisdom on Wheat



I believe WHEAT will always remain as the first source of food storage for most people who's bodies can tolerate it. For the simple reasons that it stores well and has many uses. This month has focused on wheat and its different uses. However, the last use I need to put out there for everyone to consider is best told through a story I read in the book "Prophetic Statements On Food Storage For Latter-Day Saints" pg. 158...

I was in Mesa Arizona one day and-have you ever seen someone walking toward you on the street that you were just absolutely certain had died two years before? That was a real thrill. I saw this young fellow walking toward me who was all hunched over the last time I had seen him and his bones were knurled and he looked like death itself and he told me that he had less than two months to live. Well here he was walking towards me hail and hardy and straight as an arrow. I said, "Ted, is that really you?" He said "Yes it is me." He was the brother-in law of one of my counselors in the bishopric. I said "What in the world saved your life?" he said "Wheat greens." I said "What?" Wheat greens-What does wheat greens have in it that would save your life?" He said, "It is the highest known source of vitamin C in assimilable form for the human system." And I said, "Great scott, that's an answer to prayer. We have been looking for something that would give us vitamin C and here we've had the wheat all the time." "You grow greens as you need it from the wheat you have on hand.

There was more to the story as it related to the answer to a prayer and the further explanation of vitamin C findings and validation from Doctors with all kinds of letters behind their name. However, what I take from this story goes beyond the findings. It is this...The Lord knew all along, he then inspired and instructed Prophets to encourage us to follow the plan of storing up food. (including the basics. Wheat, Honey, Salt and Milk).

Remember the counsel that is given, "store up all your grain," and take care of it! Prize it above gold and silver, above rich clothing and fine apparel, and above everything else except the bread of life! (Journal of Discourses, Vol. 5, pp. 15-17).

Orson Hyde said: "There is more salvation and security in wheat,...than in all the political schemes of the world."

Pres. Henry B. Eyring: "When the words of prophets seem repetitive, that should rivet our attention and fill our hearts with gratitude to live in such a blessed time." (Ensign, May, 1997, pp. 25)

What I the Lord have spoken, I have spoken, and I excuse not myself; and though the heavens and the earth pass away, my word shall not pass away, but shall all be fulfilled, whether by mine own voice or by the voice of my servants, it is the same. (D&C 1:38)


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Here is a video that explains how to grow your own wheat grass from hard winter wheat. There are tons of videos on this subject, I just tried to pick one that was short (2:52 min.) so more people would actually watch it. Hope you learn something and get inspired.


Here is what the wheat looks like after it has been soaked and allowed to sprout for a bit.
Plant it in some soil and before you know it you have THIS!

I have heard of people planting their wheat for what grass just as kernels, and I have also heard of them planting it after soaking it and letting it start to sprout. It supposedly works both ways, one is obviously faster then the other.
The Vitamin C thing though...well that's pretty AMAZING!