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It produces five-petaled, self-pollinating flowers over a period of 15 to 25 days. The flowers open before sunrise, and only last until noon. Blue flowers (a true blue, not purple) are the most usual, though white, pink and purple are also seen. Each flower produces 6 to 8 seeds, sometimes 10, that grow inside "bolls" on the stems about 1/3 inch (8 mm) wide. The seeds are ready to harvest 30 to 40 days after flowering. Generally, they are ready to harvest when the lower stalks start to turn yellow. Even if there are still a few flowers and green leaves at the top of the plant, you aim for about 90% of the seed bolls being brown. Some varieties are grown for their seed, some for their fibre. A few varieties are considered good for both. Flax doesn't compete well with weeds -- its small leaves don't take enough light away from weeds. The seeds are used as a grain. The seeds are glossy and usually light brown, but they can be darker brown to almost black, yellow, greenish-yellow or greenish-brown. The seeds are the size of sesame seeds. 1000 seeds will weigh only 5 to 7 g. The seeds are about 40% oil, and become very sticky when wet (there is mucilage in its seed coat.) When not wet, they are very slippery. Individuals standing on large amounts of flax seed in storage silos have been known to sink into it rapidly and suffocate beneath the seed. The seeds can be used to add texture to baked goods. If you're adding the seeds to muffins or sprinkling them on top of baked goods for nutritional benefits, the seeds should be crushed first to allow the nutrition to get out during digestion. Sprinkled whole on top, it's really just a decorative garnish with no nutritional value. Soak them first before using them as a garnish. Soak in water 10 to 120 minutes (called "conditioning the seeds" by professional bakers.) If any water is called for in your recipe, you can then use the soaking water. Afterward, you need to apply some kind of wash to your baked good to help them stick on. Flax seed is used in Red River Cereal. Flax FibreThe stalks have a bark on the outside, and inside, layers of fibre surrounding a woody centre.The fibre can be used for to make cambric, damask, linen, lace, twin, rope, and paper for currency. If Flax is being harvested for its fibre, it is ideally harvested before seed develops. The ancient Egyptians, in fact, preferred to harvest it while the plant was still in bloom. Flax grown for its fibre tends to be very closely planted -- this over-competition for nutrients causes the stalks to be slender and straight, with very fine fibres. To harvest, plants are pulled up by their roots rather than cutting (cutting damages the fibres.) The stalks are allowed to dry in bundles, root end down. Any seed pods are pulled or raked off with a "rippling comb." Then, the stalks needs to be "retted" - allowed to rot so that fibres inside the "bark" are exposed. This can be done by moistening the bundles continually over 1 1/2 to 3 weeks, especially good in damp, rainy climates, or by actually placing the bundles in water -- ponds, rivers, bogs, or vats on the farm -- and held under by weights. This method is faster, requiring only 7 to 10 days, but it does pollute the water. Henry VIII passed a law forbidding retting flax in any water where livestock drink. In Belgium, the Lys river got so polluted by the retting that the water took on a gold colour. Flax retted by being moistened ("dew retting") will produce yellowish-brown fibres; flex retted in water will produce grey fibres, unless it's running water, in which case the fibres will be a light-yellow. After retting the stalks are then dried, then beaten with wooden or cork mallets to finish breaking any remaining portions of the outer bark. Throughout the process, the bundles are kept root-end down. The fibre is then scraped free (called "scutching" or "swingling") and completely cleaned of any remaining bits of debris in it by combing them with "hackles" in increasing degrees of fineness. Two kinds of fibre result from the combing: the shorter, coarser fibres that get stuck in the combs are called "two." The longer, finer -- and therefore more desirable ones -- which don't are called "line." The, the fibre is spun in a counter-clockwise direction.
Also called: Linum usitatissimum (Scientific Name); Lin (French); Leinsamen (German); Linaza, Lino (Spanish); Linho (Portuguese)
See Also:Flax FlourOther entries for:GrainsAmaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Cereals, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Quinoa, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale, Wheat |
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Linseed