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SPROUTING:
A BRIEF OVERVIEW
Copyright (c) 1995 by Thomas E. Billings. This document may
be distributed freely for non-commercial purposes provided 1) this copyright notice is
included, 2) the document is distributed free of charge, with the sole exception that a
photocopy charge, not to exceed ten cents (U.S.) per printed page may be charged by those
distributing this paper. All commercial rights reserved; contact author for details
(contact address given at end).
Basics of Sprouting:
- Obtain seed for sprouting. Store in bug-proof containers, away
from extreme heat/cold. Seed should be viable, and, to extent possible, free of chemicals.
- Basic steps in sprouting are:
- measure out appropriate amount of seed, visually inspect and
remove stones, sticks, weed seed, broken seeds, etc.
- rinse seed (if seed is small and clean, can usually skip this
rinse)
- soak seed in water for appropriate time
- rinse soaked seed, put in sprouting environment for
appropriate time
- service seeds (rinse) in sprouting environment as needed
- when ready, rinse seeds. Store in refrigerator, in sprouting
environment or in other suitable container until ready to use. If not used within 12
hours, seeds should be serviced (rinsed) every 24 hours in refrigerator. Best to eat as
soon as possible, as freshness is what makes sprouts special!
Jars and Cloth: Two Suggested Sprouting Methods
Jars: use wide-mouth, glass canning jars, available at many
hardware stores. You will need screen lids - cut pieces of different (plastic) mesh
screens, or buy some of the special plastic screen lids designed for sprouting. Sprouting
in jars is quite easy: simply put seed in jar, add soak water, put lid on. When soak is
over, invert jar and drain water, then rinse again. Then prop jar up at 45 degree angle
for water to drain. Keep out of direct sunlight. Rinse seed in jar 2-3 times per day until
ready, always keeping it angled for drainage.
Cloth: soak seed in flat-bottom containers, in shallow water.
When soak done, empty seed into strainer and rinse. Then take flat-bottom bowl or saucer,
line bottom with wet 100% cotton washcloth, spread seed on wet cloth. Then take 2nd wet
cloth and put on top of seed, or, if bottom washcloth is big enough, fold over wet seeds.
Can add additional water to washcloths 12 hours later by a) sprinkling on top, or b) if
very dry, remove seed from cloth, rinse, re-wet cloth, put seed back between wet cloths.
Cloths used should be 100% cotton (terrycloth) or linen, used exclusively for sprouting,
and of light colors. Cheap cotton washcloths (and cheap plastic bowls) work well and will
last a long time.
Comparison: Jar vs. Cloth Methods
Jar method is more versatile; can grow greens in the jar
(e.g., 6-8 day old alfalfa greens), and the jar is less likely to mold than cloth for
sprouts that require more than 2 days. However, the jar method needs a convenient drainage
system (otherwise mold can develop). The cloth method can withstand some direct sunlight
(direct sunlight in early stages of sprouting can cook the seed in jars), and needs no
drainage system. The methods require roughly the same time, though 2nd service of cloth is
very fast. Almonds, buckwheat give better results in cloth.
Other Methods of Sprouting:
- Plastic tube - variation on jar method; opens at both ends -
easier to remove long sprouts like greens from tube than from jar.
- Sprouting bags - cotton or linen; also plastic mesh. Soak seed
in bag in water, then hang up inside plastic bag (forms a little greenhouse).
- Trays: very good for growing greens. Might need drainage
system.
- Clay saucer: used for mucilaginous seeds like flax, psyllium,
etc.
- Commercial sprouters: wide variety available. Often fairly
expensive; most don't work as well as cloth/jar methods!
What is the best time/length to eat sprouts?
Ultimately you will answer this question by experimenting -
growing sprouts and eating them at different ages/lengths. My preference is to eat sprouts
(except almonds, pumpkin seeds) when the growing root is, on average, the length of the
soaked seed. Almonds and pumpkin seeds are discussed below.
A note on times: the sprouting times given below are based on
cloth and/or jar method, and reflect an average time. The soaking times can be increased
or decreased somewhat (except for buckwheat), with little or limited impact on the
results. If you are using a different method, especially one of the commercial sprouting
units, the times here will not apply and you will have to monitor your sprouts to decide
when they are ready.
Grains and Similar Seeds
- Amaranth: Soak 2-4 hours, sprout 1-1.5 days. Method: cloth.
Very tiny seeds, likely to flow through screen in jar method; line strainer with sprouting
cloth to retain seeds. Sprout can be very bitter. Might be able to grow as greens, if you
can get appropriate variety of amaranth.
- Barley: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.25-1.5 days. Method: cloth
or jar. Use only unhulled barley; "whole" hulled barley and pearled barley won't
sprout. Chewy, somewhat bland sprout. Hulls are tough; people with stomach or intestinal
ulcers might find hulls irritating. Can be used for grass also.
- Buckwheat: Soak 15-20 minutes only; sprout 1-1.5 days. Method:
cloth. Use hulled, *raw* buckwheat groats. Kasha is usually toasted, won't sprout. Raw
buckwheat is white/green to light brown; toasted buckwheat is medium brown. Unhulled
buckwheat (black hulls) are for greens, not general sprouting. Don't soak longer than 20
minutes as it spoils readily. Monitor moistness, rinse or change cloths every 12 hours to
avoid spoilage. Good sprout, mild flavor. Sprouts much faster in warm/hot weather.
- Corn group:
- Field corn: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 2.0+ days. Method: jar or
cloth.
- Popcorn: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.5+ days. Method: jar or
cloth. Blue mold can be a problem, esp. with field corn. Sweet corn seeds (if you can find
them) will sprout also. Field corn sprouts, if long enough, are tender but bland/starchy
tasting. Popcorn sprouts are very sweet, but the hull doesn't soften much in sprouting -
very hard to eat. Not worth the trouble; suggest eating raw sweet corn (including raw corn
silk, which is delicious) instead.
- Millet: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1-1.5 days. Method: cloth or
jar. Hulled millet - most seeds will sprout, but some ferment, producing very sharp taste.
Unhulled millet best sprouter, but hull is very crunchy and sprout is rather bland. Best
used in recipes.
- Oats: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.25-1.5 days. Method: cloth or
jar. Must use unhulled oats; so-called "whole oats" or oat groats won't sprout.
Good sprout, mild flavor similar to milk. Thick hull makes it difficult to eat; best used
in recipes (see sprout milk recipe). Can grow as grass also.
- Quinoa: Soak 2-4 hours, sprout 12 hours. Method: cloth or jar.
Very fast sprouter. Must rinse seeds multiple times to get off soapy tasting saponin in
seed coat. Very fast sprouter; can grow as greens. Strong flavor that many find
unpleasant. Small seed, line strainer with cloth. White and black quinoa are available.
- Rice: Soak 12-18 hours, sprout 1.0+ days. Method: cloth or
jar. Only brown, unprocessed rice will sprout. White rice, wild rice are dead and won't
sprout. Standard long grain rice doesn't sprout. Short, medium grain brown rice, also
brown basmati (but not Texmati) rice will sprout. Before root appears, rice can be eaten
but difficult: bland, chewy, *very* filling. Once root appears, rice sprout is very
bitter. The only rice I suggest sprouting is: Lundberg Farms "Wehani" rice, a
specialty rice (sprout 1.5 days). It is least bitter - less bitter than fenugreek - of
possible use in recipes.
- Wheat/rye group:
- Rye: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1-1.5 days. Method: cloth or jar.
Nice sprout - good flavor. Rye harvested immature or handled improperly can have strong,
unpleasant flavored. If it molds, discard (ergot mold possible).
- Triticale is a cross between rye and wheat; used to be
available from Arrowhead Mills, but haven't seen it in market for some years.
- Wheat, including Kamut and Spelt: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout
1-1.5 days. Method: cloth or jar. Hard Winter wheat better than soft Spring wheat. Wheat
can get excessively sweet at 2+ days of sprouting. Spelt has nice texture, but spelt and
kamut are more expensive than ordinary wheat. Wheat, rye, kamut, spelt, triticale can be
used for grass also.
Other Seeds
- Almonds: Soak 10-14 hours, sprout 1.0 day. Method: cloth Use
only unblanched almonds. Sprout+storage time should not exceed 2 days or sprouts may turn
rancid. Best to peel sprouts before eating (peeled have incredible flavor). Peeling is
tedious, reduced by blanching in warm water (15-30 seconds in hot water from faucet). One
of the very best sprouts!
- Cabbage, Kale: Soak 6-14 hours, sprout 1+ days. Method: cloth
or jar. Very strong flavor, best used as flavoring in mixtures. Can also be grown into
greens. Seeds relatively expensive.
- Fenugreek: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 18 hrs or more. Method:
cloth or jar. Slightly bitter, best used as flavoring additive in mixtures. Hindi name:
methi. According to "The Yoga of Herbs" by Lad/Frawley, fenugreek sprouts are
good digestive aid and good for the liver. Hard seeds are common in fenugreek.
- Mucilaginous seeds: flax, psyllium, chia These can be sprouted
as flavoring additive in mixtures (alfalfa, clover, or mustard); to sprout alone requires
special clay saucer method. Sprouts are not so good tasting, not worth the trouble for
most people.
- Mustard: Soak 6-14 hours, sprout 1.0+ days. Method: cloth,
jar, or tray. Good flavoring additive for other sprouts. Available in 3 forms: black,
brown, yellow. Brown seeds are smaller and harder to handle in mixtures; yellow or black
recommended for mixtures. Can grow as greens also.
- Pumpkin: Soak 8-14 hours; sprout (if you must) 1.0 day. True
sprouting by pumpkin seeds (developing root) is quite rare. Bacterial spoilage and
rancidity are problems when you try to sprout them. Best to simply soak them, then eat.
Pumpkin seeds as sold in the market are not hulled - the variety grown has no hulls on its
seeds.
- Radish: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.0+ days. Method: cloth, jar
or tray. Very hot flavor! Use sparingly in mixtures as flavoring agent. Can be used for
(hot!) greens also.
- Sesame: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1-1.5 days. Method: cloth or
jar. Must use unhulled sesame seeds for sprouting; hulled seeds can be soaked to improve
flavor and digestibility. A black sesame seed (considered superior to white seed in
Ayurveda) is available; haven't found it in unhulled form. Sprout+storage time should not
exceed 1.5 days; sprouts continue to grow in refrigerator and start to get bitter at 2.0
day mark, and can be very bitter by 2.5 days. A small bowl of sesame sprouts, with a bit
of raw honey on them, is very nice.
- Sunflower: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 18 hours. Method: cloth or
jar. Use hulled sunflower; unhulled are for sunflower greens only. Need to skim off seed
skins at end of soak period, when rinsing. If you leave them in, they will spoil and your
sprouts will spoil quickly. Has a nice, earthy flavor; very popular.
Legumes
- Alfalfa, Clover:
For greens: soak 4-6 hours, sprout 6-8 days. Method: tray or jar.
For use when short: soak 4-14 hours, sprout 1-1.5 days. Method: jar or cloth.
Alfalfa and clover are most commonly grown as greens. A good non-traditional use for them
is as flavoring additive in mixtures, for ex: lentil, alfalfa, radish is nice (alfalfa
counteracts "heat" of radish). Alkaloid levels can be very high in alfalfa. Need
alfalfa seed with very high germination rate (over 90%) to successfully grow greens in jar
- else unsprouted seeds will decay and spoil greens.
- Garbanzo group:
- Garbanzos, standard: Soak 12-18 hours, sprout 1.5+ days.
Method: cloth or jar.
- Kala channa: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.5 days. Method: cloth
or jar.
- Green channa: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.0 day. Method: cloth
or jar. Garbanzos, also know as chick peas or ceci, are common in commercial mixtures.
They sprout easily but they also spoil easily (bacteria or mold). Kala channa is a
miniature garbanzo, sold in (East) Indian food stores, that sprouts reliably - try
sprouting it instead of standard garbanzos. Green channa is similar, naturally green, and
sprouts very quickly. Green channa has stronger flavor; best to eat with turmeric or
ginger.
- Large beans: Anasazi, Black, Fava, Kidney, Lima, Navy, Pinto,
Soy, etc. Except for soy, these are irrelevant to the sprouter - raw flavor is truly
horrible. Also, serious toxicity/allergy/digestibility issues with these raw beans. Except
for soy (edible raw if grown long enough), these beans must be cooked to be digestible,
hence are not of interest to the raw-fooder.
- Lentils, brown/green and red. Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.0 day.
Method: cloth or jar. The brown/green lentils come in a variety of sizes; the smallest
sizes generally sprout faster than the larger. Red lentils are usually sold in split
"dahl" form; for sprouting you must buy whole red lentils. Red lentils are red
inside and brown outside; their Hindi name is masoor (brown masoor). Lentil sprouts have a
spicy flavor and are very popular. Might find hard seeds in lentils from India.
- Mung bean group:
- Mung beans: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 18 hrs - 1 day. Method:
cloth or jar.
- Urid/urad: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 18 hrs - 1 day. Method:
cloth or jar.
- Adzuki beans: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 1.0 day. Method: cloth
or jar.
- Moth beans: Soak 8-14 hours, sprout 12 -18 hrs. Method: cloth
or jar. Urid (also spelled urad) is a black shelled mung bean, available in Indian stores.
Stronger flavor than regular mung. Hard seeds common in mung and urid. Moth is a brownish
bean, similar to mung, available in Indian stores. Very fast, reliable sprouter, with mild
flavor - similar to mung. Discard "floaters" when sprouting moth. P.S. there is
a mung bean that is yellow inside, in Indian stores, but so far have only found split
(dahl) form.
- Peanuts: Soak 12-14 hours, sprout 1.5 days. Method: cloth or
jar. Must use unblanched peanuts; recommend removing skins to improve digestibility.
Spanish variety peanuts have loose skin, can remove most before soaking. Other peanuts -
soak 1-2 hours then peel off skins, return to soaking in new, clean water. With peanut
peeled you will probably observe high incidence of (bright) yellow mold - possible
aflatoxin.
- Peas, Blackeye: Soak 12-14 hours, sprout 1 day. Method: cloth
or jar. Flavor is too strong to be eaten alone. Makes good flavoring additive for
mixtures, if used sparingly.
- Peas, (Field): Soak 12-14 hours, sprout 1.5 days. Method:
cloth or jar. Be sure to buy whole peas, not split peas (split won't sprout). Yellow peas
are slower to sprout, and have stronger flavor than green peas. Flavor too strong when raw
for many people. Insect problems common with peas in storage (beetle infestation); store
in bug-proof containers. Can be grown as greens also.
Note: if purchasing kala channa, green channa, urid/urad, red lentils, etc.
from Indian store, be sure to obtain the whole seeds, and not the split (dahl) or oiled
form of the seeds.
Some Sprouting Seed Mixtures of Interest:
- mung/adzuki, fenugreek
- mung/adzuki, urid, dill seed
- lentils, blackeye peas, alfalfa, radish
- sunflower seed, moth, fenugreek
- alfalfa/clover, radish/mustard (for greens)
Experiment and develop your own favorite mixtures!
Soak Instead of Sprouting:
- Herb seeds: fennel, celery, caraway, cardamom, poppy, etc.
- Filberts: soak 12 hours; makes crisper, improves flavor.
- Pecans: soak 8 hours; long soaks can make mushy.
- Walnuts: soak 12 hours; flavor changes - you might like or
dislike.
- High fat nuts (brazil nuts, macadamias) may benefit some from
soaking, but difference (soaked vs. unsoaked) is small.
Staple Foods for Sprouting:
- (first tier) wheat, almonds, sunflower, sesame, mung/adzuki,
rye
- (2nd tier, obstacles) oats, barley, buckwheat, rice, lentils*,
other legumes*
- (flavoring) fenugreek, mustard, radish, kale, cabbage * see
question on legumes below
Easy for Beginners:
wheat, sunflower, almonds, lentil, mung
Indoor Gardening (grown indoors, in soil):
- Grasses: wheat, barley, oats, rye, kamut, spelt, triticale,
and others.
- Vegetables: amaranth, mustard/mizuna, fennel, kale, cabbage,
etc.
- Legumes: peas, snow peas
- Other greens: buckwheat, sunflower
What are hard seeds?
Seeds that are hard, like rocks, and they stay that way
during soaking and sprouting. Hard seeds are a sort of natural insurance in the sense that
if planted in soil they will eventually sprout - late in the season or next season. Hard
seeds may be a threat to certain types of dental work, esp. porcelain crowns (porcelain on
gold crowns are stronger and hard seeds are less risk; metal crowns are stronger than
natural enamel). To minimize hard seeds, suggest you soak seeds as in the cloth method: in
shallow water, in a large container with a flat bottom. Then at the end of the soak stage,
you can visually inspect the soaked seeds and remove those that are still hard. This
technique is not 100% foolproof, but if done carefully, will substantially reduce the
number of hard seeds. The method will work with any seed, but fenugreek seeds are so small
that picking out the hard ones is quite difficult.
Anything wrong with sprouted legumes?
If you can digest them without the production of a lot of gas
(flatulence), there's nothing wrong with them. Legumes are very high in protein, hard to
digest, and cause gas for many people. Gabriel Cousens (Conscious Eating, pgs. 70, 372,
490) recommends that consumption of sprouted legumes (except alfalfa, next question) be
minimized. Ann Wigmore (Rebuild Your Health, pg. 73) tells us that flatulence gas is toxic
and harms your entire system. From an Ayurvedic viewpoint, legumes aggravate the vata
dosha; individuals with vata body type or a vata disorder should minimize legumes.
Ayurveda suggests eating turmeric or ginger with proteins (legume sprouts) as a digestive
aid. A number of other herbs/spices can serve as digestive aids and/or counteract the vata
effect of legumes. Among legumes, mung and adzuki beans are considered easiest to digest.
What about toxins in alfalfa sprouts?
Alfalfa sprouts contain saponins, a class of alkaloids (7.93%
on dry weight basis, sprouts from commercial sources) and L-canavanine sulfate, an amino
acid analog. Saponin levels are at their maximum when sprouts are 6-8 days old (most
common time for eating); L-canavanine sulfate is present in the seed and decreases as the
sprout grows. The issue of whether these factors are significant is subject to debate.
- Livingston et al. (Nutritional and Toxicological Aspects of
Food Safety, pgs. 253-268), citing research by Malinow, report negative health effects in
animals and humans from consumption of alfalfa sprouts. They believe that consuming large
amounts of alfalfa sprouts is risky.
- Cousens (Conscious Eating, pg. 372) , citing relevant client
cases, reports no harmful effects from consumption of moderate amounts of raw alfalfa
sprouts.
- Readers are encouraged to check the above references and
decide for themselves on this issue. An alternate, experimental approach is to hold your
diet constant for a few days, then add alfalfa sprouts to your diet, and observe the
effects (if any) of the alfalfa - that is, listen to your body.
Don't Sprout: Sorghum (potentially toxic levels of cyanide in
seed coat)
Oat Sprout Milk - Special Version
The following makes around 3 cups of delicious oat/almond
milk.
Start with: a little more than 1/4 cup dry sprouting oats,
and, optionally, 1/8 cup Lundberg Farms Wehani rice. Soak 12 hours, then sprout for 1.5
days. Separately, soak 15-20 almonds for 12 hours, then sprout for 1.0 days (should be
ready about same time as oat sprouts).
Rinse oat(/rice) sprouts, put in blender with 2 cups good
quality water, blend. Best to add 1 cup water, blend on medium for 30 seconds or so, then
add second cup of water and blend on high for another 30-45 seconds. Now strain the
blended liquid through a steel mesh strainer and/or cheesecloth (or similar).Discard hull
pulp, rinse blender clean, put base milk back in blender. **
Peel the sprouted almonds (might blanch first with warm
water), rinse, put almonds in blender. Add 1 tablespoon of raw honey (or other sweetener,
optional) to blender. Now add flavoring, one of: vanilla bean (about 1/2 inch or so),
cardamom seed (decorticated or powder, 1/4 tsp), or cinnamon (1 rounded tsp). Run blender
on medium speed for a few seconds to mix/grind, then turn down to low speed and let
blender run for 5+ minutes to homogenize. (The almonds are not strained out but retained
in the milk for full flavor and nutrition.)
Note that the recipe up to ** is the basic milk recipe; can
use recipe, substituting other types of grains, seeds, or nuts for the rice, to yield
other types of oat sprout milk. Sprouting/soaking details will vary with grain, seed, or
nut used in place of the rice.
Author contact: T. Billings, 2125 Delaware St; #F; Berkeley,
CA 94709 |