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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. leek, carrot and einkorn berry

leek, carrot and einkorn berry

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  • M This user is from outside of this forum
    M This user is from outside of this forum
    madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    I made this recipe again yesterday. https://bakinghermann.com/zeytinyagli-pirasa-turkish-leeks-with-olive-oil/#recipe

    However this time I used einkorn berry as my grain. I found at my local co-op. I’ve used it before and really liked it. However, yesterday I looked it up, and found the results very interesting!

    Apparently it’s one of the oldest used grains by humans! Pretty neat! It’s also delicious

    Link Preview Image
    Einkorn - Wikipedia

    favicon

    (en.m.wikipedia.org)

    Served with toasted garlic sourdough made by a local baker.

    If anyone knows where to find seeds for Einkorn, I’d one hundred percent try to grow this instead of my lawn lmao. Apparently its a pretty hardy plant

    M C 2 Replies Last reply
    41
    • M madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com

      I made this recipe again yesterday. https://bakinghermann.com/zeytinyagli-pirasa-turkish-leeks-with-olive-oil/#recipe

      However this time I used einkorn berry as my grain. I found at my local co-op. I’ve used it before and really liked it. However, yesterday I looked it up, and found the results very interesting!

      Apparently it’s one of the oldest used grains by humans! Pretty neat! It’s also delicious

      Link Preview Image
      Einkorn - Wikipedia

      favicon

      (en.m.wikipedia.org)

      Served with toasted garlic sourdough made by a local baker.

      If anyone knows where to find seeds for Einkorn, I’d one hundred percent try to grow this instead of my lawn lmao. Apparently its a pretty hardy plant

      M This user is from outside of this forum
      M This user is from outside of this forum
      madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I keep trying to upload a photo of the raw einkorn berry to share and it keeps timing out. Whether in a comment, or edit to my post, it fails. All well.

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      • Cooking C Cooking shared this topic on
      • M madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com

        I made this recipe again yesterday. https://bakinghermann.com/zeytinyagli-pirasa-turkish-leeks-with-olive-oil/#recipe

        However this time I used einkorn berry as my grain. I found at my local co-op. I’ve used it before and really liked it. However, yesterday I looked it up, and found the results very interesting!

        Apparently it’s one of the oldest used grains by humans! Pretty neat! It’s also delicious

        Link Preview Image
        Einkorn - Wikipedia

        favicon

        (en.m.wikipedia.org)

        Served with toasted garlic sourdough made by a local baker.

        If anyone knows where to find seeds for Einkorn, I’d one hundred percent try to grow this instead of my lawn lmao. Apparently its a pretty hardy plant

        C This user is from outside of this forum
        C This user is from outside of this forum
        crank0271@lemmy.world
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Calling them einkorn “berries” makes this a salad.

        Kidding of course, but it looks delicious! As for planting einkorn “seeds,” if the einkorn you purchased from your local co-op is whole grain and not treated in any way you can probably just plant it (not vouching for the legitimacy of the info on this site, but it seems straightforward enough): https://farmandanimals.com/how-to-grow-einkorn-wheat/

        What I would probably do is try to sprout a few einkorn berries to see how viable they are. If you get a certain amount of it to sprout then I would just buy more einkorn and sow it. You don’t really need any special equipment for sprouting - a jar or a tray and some paper towels should do it. I’ve purchased Sprout People’s sprouting cups and use their reference material previously: https://sproutpeople.org/pages/growing-sprouts

        Either way, it’s great that you’re appreciating an “ancient” wheat. Good luck turning your lawn into a wheat field. Keep us posted!

        M 1 Reply Last reply
        1
        3
        • C crank0271@lemmy.world

          Calling them einkorn “berries” makes this a salad.

          Kidding of course, but it looks delicious! As for planting einkorn “seeds,” if the einkorn you purchased from your local co-op is whole grain and not treated in any way you can probably just plant it (not vouching for the legitimacy of the info on this site, but it seems straightforward enough): https://farmandanimals.com/how-to-grow-einkorn-wheat/

          What I would probably do is try to sprout a few einkorn berries to see how viable they are. If you get a certain amount of it to sprout then I would just buy more einkorn and sow it. You don’t really need any special equipment for sprouting - a jar or a tray and some paper towels should do it. I’ve purchased Sprout People’s sprouting cups and use their reference material previously: https://sproutpeople.org/pages/growing-sprouts

          Either way, it’s great that you’re appreciating an “ancient” wheat. Good luck turning your lawn into a wheat field. Keep us posted!

          M This user is from outside of this forum
          M This user is from outside of this forum
          madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Amazing information! Yeah, I read that the berry is called that because its husk is removed, and you’re right, it should sprout. I’m definitely trying it. It’s the wrong time of year to plant right now, but I’m going to try it anyway.

          Thank you for the information and reference matieials, im totally checking it out. You’ve no idea how dope I think it is!

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