The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

malted barely flour

cmckinley's picture
cmckinley

malted barely flour

I cannot find malted barely flour anywhere!  I have seen it in grain form, I guess I could just mill it?  Anyways I am in Seattle if anybody knows where to get some already milled let me know!

 

I am happy to say that Cliff's in Caldwell, Idaho does carry malted barley flour! Yay for localism!!

Comments

Nickisafoodie's picture
Nickisafoodie

I found it easier to make my own - but use wheat instead as finding malted or worse, finding barley that can sprout without having a hull is virtually impossible.

I sprout it in the oven with the lamp on (78 degrees, perfect temp) for 2-3 days until the sprout is the length of the original berry, then dry out using by pointing a heat lamp at the tray for a day or two.  When dry, I grind in my whisper mill, which is what I use to mill my flour.  The result is a fine powder that is sweet and can be substituted for malted barley.  cheaper and easier if you can do the grinding.  I add 1 tsp per loaf, and a touch of honey, works out well...

JoeVa's picture
JoeVa

What process do you use for sprouting? Do you use cotton or a glass jar?

Giovanni

osx-addict's picture
osx-addict

Not sure if you've got any King Aurthur Flour in your area or not but they claim that all of their flour has malted barley as an additive -- found a comment from them claiming that on Google.. 

cmckinley's picture
cmckinley

Thank you evrybody!

bnom's picture
bnom

Have you tried Central Market in Shoreline or the Ballard Market?  I'm pretty sure I got malted barley flour at Central Market in their excellent bulf foods section. 

What I'm having trouble finding is malt syrup in Seattle - any suggestions there?

droidman's picture
droidman