D'Acampo -- Gino D'Arcy Spice Apples Dabinett Apple Dai Choy Goh Daifuku Daikon Radishes Dainagon Beans Dairy Dairy -- Butter Dairy -- Cheese Dairy Salt Daisui Li Dakchip Potatoes Dakota Chief Potatoes Dakota Gold Apples Dakota Pearl Potatoes Dalgairns -- Catherine Emily Callbeck Dalmatian Beans Dalmatian Bitter Cherry Dalmatian Marasca Cherry Dalmatian Wild Cherry Damascena Dambala Damper Devils Damper Dogs Dampfwurst Sausages Dan's Italian Rocambole Garlic Dan's Russian Porcelain Garlic Dan Beh Danablu Danbo Cheese Dancing Mushroom Dancy Tangerines Dandara Dandelion Previous | Next | Wheat Berries© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedA Wheat Berry is a wheat grain stripped of its outer hull to leave just the whole kernel. When cooked, they have a "tender to the bite" texture and a nutty taste. The health-happies will order Wheat Berries in large quantities from mail-order suppliers and grind an amount up fresh each week to make their own whole-wheat flour. You cook them as you would other grains used as side-dishes, such as rice, bulgur wheat, etc. Mixed with legumes (e.g. beans), you can make a complete protein dish for your vegetarian friends. In fact, you may wish to cook these lots for your vegetarian friends, boiling them down into a very nutritious gruel. You can also use cooked Wheat Berries in salads, soups, meat loaves, or as added texture in breads. Cooking Tips See Also:Spelt BerriesOther entries for:WheatBulgur Wheat, Cracked Wheat, Durum Wheat, Emmer, Hard Wheat, Soft Wheat, Spring Wheat, Wheat Berries, Wheat Bran, Wheat Flakes, Wheat Germ, Winter Wheat Other entries for:GrainsAmaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Cereals, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Quinoa, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale |
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