100 Dollar Cake 3 Musketeers Bars A-Ri-Rang À Blanc À l'Africaine À l'Agnès Sorel À l'Aillade À l'Ailleule À l'Albigeoise À l'Albufera À l'Algérienne À l'Alsacienne À l'Ambassadrice À l'Américaine À l'Ancienne À l'Andalouse À l'Anglaise À l'Anglaise -- Paner À l'Anversoise À l'Ardennaise À l'Argenteuil À l'Ariégeoise À l'Arlésienne À l'Armenonville À l'Armoricaine À l'Arrabiata À l'Autrichienne À l'Auvergnate À l'Encre À l'Espagnole Previous | Next | Sorghum Flour© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced Jowar Flour Milo FlourSorghum Flour has a bland taste, but then wheat flour isn't so exciting on its own, either. Sorghum Flour is made in the same way as wheat flour is. The flour is creamy-white to yellow, with flecks of light and dark in it, and is gluten free, which is its main advantage for those who need such flour. Its nutrition is similar to that of wheat. In North America, it is an expensive, specialty flour. To get it cheaper, try looking in ethnic stores such as Indian, where it might be called jowar or juwar. Cooking Tips
Nutrition If people have a diet that is too exclusively based on sorghum, they can develop pellagra, a disease also experienced by people whose diet relies too much on corn untreated with lye. See the entry on Corn. Though sorghum seems to be one of the latest flours to be keened about by the Health Foodies, there is no solid, consistent nutritional information, and no hard science that it is any more nutritious than good old wheat flour. Certain varieties of Sorghum Flour (i.e. Sorghum Black, bran) have been rated by the USDA as being high in anti-oxidents. In fact, the UN's Food and Agriculture Agency says: "The nutritional quality of sorghum and millets, especially the former, is poor. Therefore attempts have been made to fortify these cereals with legumes or other cereals to make nutritionally superior and acceptable products. Cost, availability of ingredients and marketability must be taken into consideration if fortification is to be implemented successfully on a sustained basis." It appears its main values are (a) it will grow as a subsistence crop in arid regions of the world as food for the poor and (b) in the first world, it provides a welcome change to potato-starch cookies for those who need gluten-free flour. Also called: Farine de Sorghum (French); Sorghum mehl (German); Harina de Sorghum (Spanish); Jowar, Juwar (Indian)
See Also:SorghumOther entries for: Sorghum FlourSorghum Flour Other entries for:FlourAsh Content of Flour, Bean Flours, Black Millet Flour, Bromated Flour, Chapati Flour, Corn Flours, Durum Flour, Flax Flour, Flour Grades, French Flours, German Flours, Italian Flours, Malanga Flour, Malted Barley Flour, Matzo Meal, Millet Flour, Nut Flours, Oat Flour, Okonomiyaki Flour, Potato Flour, Quinoa Flour, Rice Flour, Rye Flour, Seasoned Flour, Spelt Flour, Stone Ground Flour, Water Chestnut Flour, Wheat Flour, Whole Durum Flour |
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Jowar Flour 