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Environment

Homegrown Grains: The Key to Food Security

By Gene Logsdon, Chelsea Green Publishing. Posted May 27, 2009.


OK, you've mastered tomatoes and peppers -- but how about learning how to grow grains in your own yard?
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The following is an excerpt from Small-Scale Grain Raising: An Organic Guide to Growing, Processing, and Using Nutritious Whole Grains for Home Gardeners and Local Farmers, Second Edition by Gene Logsdon. It has been adapted for the Web.

I remember the first year we grew grains in our garden. A good gardening buddy dropped by one day early in July just when our wheat was ripe and ready to harvest. He didn’t know that though. His reason for stopping was to show me two splendid, juicy tomatoes picked ripe from his garden. After a few ritual brags -- and knowing full well that my tomatoes were still green -- he asked me in a condescending sort of way what was new in my garden. I remembered the patch of ripe wheat.

"Oh, nothing much," I answered nonchalantly, "except the pancake patch."

"The pancake patch?" he asked incredulously.

"Yeah. Sure. Until you’ve tasted pancakes fresh from the garden, you haven’t lived."

"And where might I find these pancakes growing?" he queried sarcastically, to humor my madness.

"Right up there behind the chicken coop in that little patch of wheat. All you have to do is thresh out a cupful or two, grind the grain in the blender, mix up some batter and into the skillet. Not even Aunt Jemima in all her glory can make pancakes like those."

My friend didn’t believe me until I showed him, step by step. We cut off a couple of armloads of wheat stalks, flailed the grain from the heads onto a piece of clean cloth (with a plastic toy ball bat), winnowed the chaff from the grain, ground the grain to flour in the blender, made batter, and fried pancakes. Topped them with real maple syrup. Sweet ecstasy. My friend forgot all about his tomatoes. The next year, he invited me over for grain sorghum cookies, proudly informing me that grain sorghum flour made pastries equal to, if not better than, whole wheat flour. Moreover, grain sorghum was easier to thresh. I had not only made another convert to growing grains in the garden, but one who had quickly taught me something.

Grow Your Own Grains

The reason Americans find it a bit weird to grow small plots or rows of grain in gardens is that they are not used to thinking of grains as food directly derived from plants, the way they view fruits and vegetables. The North American, unlike most of the world’s peoples, especially Asians and Africans, thinks grain is something manufactured in a factory somewhere. Flour is to be purchased like automobiles and pianos. Probably this attitude came from the practice of hauling grains to the gristmill in past agrarian times. Without the convenience of small power grinders and blenders of today, overworked housewives of earlier times were only too glad to have hubby haul the grain to the gristmill. And that gave him an excuse to sit around all day at the mill talking to his neighbors.

But even with the advent of convenient kitchen aids to make grain cookery easier, the American resists. He will work hard at the complex task of making wine -- seldom with a whole lot of success -- but will not grind whole wheat or corn into nutritious meal, a comparatively easy task. I know, because I was that way myself. Until I saw with my own eyes that a good ten-speed blender or kitchen mill could turn grain into flour, I hesitated. Now it boggles my mind to remember that for most of my life I lived right next to acres and acres of amber waves of grain, where combines made the threshing simplicity itself, and yet our family always bought all our meal and flour.

The real tragedy of that ignorance was that the flour we purchased usually was the kind that had been de-germed and de-branned too. Most of the nutrition had been taken out of that flour to give the American home cook what she seemed to want: a pure white powder that would last indefinitely on the shelf and make pastries of fluffy, empty calories.

What has sparked a new, or renewed, interest in homegrown grains is the dramatic rise in grain prices, and rumors of shortages worldwide, that occurred in 2007. Whether these high prices and shortages are the result of ever-rising populations in so-called third world countries, the dramatic increase in the price of oil, or the greater use of corn and other food plants for making biofuels, we can’t say for sure. Nor can we predict whether these conditions will continue. But we have been warned. For a whole host of reasons, it is time to think about growing your own bread.

The nutritional picture for whole grains is getting better all the time, thanks to the progress being made by plant geneticists. There are, first of all, the problematical GMO advances (genetically modified grains), which make modern chemical and large-scale farming easier. It is too early to predict what this development will mean for the future. So far, these genetic wonder plants haven’t meant bigger yields or haven’t produced a farming method that third world (or perhaps even first world) countries can afford. But some of these developments, which can stack disease-attacking genes into grains (or into products like milk from cloned animals) may indeed have medicinal value and justification. It’s too soon to know.


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See more stories tagged with: agriculture, farming, sustainable agriculture, grains

Gene Logsdon farms in Upper Sandusky, Ohio. He has published more than two dozen books; his Chelsea Green books include Small-Scale Grain Raising (Second Edition), Living at Nature's Pace, The Contrary Farmer's Invitation to Gardening, Good Spirits, and The Contrary Farmer. He writes a popular blog at OrganicToBe.org, is a regular contributor to Farming magazine and The Draft Horse Journal, and writes an award-winning weekly column in the Carey, Ohio Progressor Times.

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Interesting and Promising Data -
Posted by: RoffleTheWaffle on May 28, 2009 2:04 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to the figures given, that means that the quantity of wheat needed to produce a single one-pound loaf of bread requires roughly sixteen to twenty-five square feet of growing space. For the skeptical or experimental grower, that's a perfectly manageable space that would produce actual, edible results. (The plots described would be between four-by-four and five-by-five feet, which is pretty tiny.)

The common conception is that to produce even one loaf of bread you require a vast expanse of grain. That just isn't true, but to produce a year's worth of grain for even one person you do require considerable space. Citing the figures again, to rack up a whole bushel of wheat, you'd need something on the order of 1,000 square feet - or a square plot between thirty and thirty-five feet long on each side. I had a thirty foot wide above-ground pool on my property once, and while that miniature field would take up a good amount of space in my yard and probably make the neighbors unhappy, that's some fifty loaves of home-made bread according to this article. Pretty astonishing, but if wheat was all you ate, it would take several bushels a year to feed you, requiring several times as much space. I could grow maybe five in my back yard alone, ten if I used my front yard too. (As much as I'd love to have an excuse not to mow my front lawn except at harvest time, somehow I don't see this happening!) That's a lot - enough to feed my whole family, actually - but also a lot of space and what would no doubt be a lot of work.

It sure makes me appreciate the world's farmers a lot more, that's for damn sure. Most people in this country don't have a clue where their food comes from or how it's made. The growing part (and the area of land used for it) is just step one.

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Zak
Posted by: zeq2m9 on Jun 2, 2009 1:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Very cool stuff, albeit a lot of work.

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Potatoes instead of grains would work better for most gardeners
Posted by: JLPearson on Jun 2, 2009 3:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Potatoes are a healthy complex carbohydrate with minerals and vitamins, even more so in the spuds with red or blue skins and/or flesh. They take far less space to grow than either wheat or corn, and they don't have to be threshed. In the amount of land you need to produce that one loaf of bread or one batch of pancakes, you can produce several months worth of potatoes. Potatoes can also be grown in containers, like large pots or inside old tires or straw bales, etc.

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Excellent Article
Posted by: red godowar on Jun 3, 2009 12:25 AM   
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Thanks Alternet for this article. This is not your typical "off the grid" type of article, but I very much view this sort of information as a means of yet another way of accomplishing just that.

And that's a good thing given how corrupt a major portion of corporations have become.

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gimmie shelter
Posted by: gimmie shelter on Jun 4, 2009 9:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is one of the main reasons I read AlterNet. You just never know what valuable information you will receive. In a time when peak oil is behind us and corporations and our government are out to squeeze us into extinction or regulate us into a straight jacket it really helps to have information which can make us all more self sufficient. Thanks to the author and AlterNet.

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