The Fresh Loaf

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Mill sprouted wheat immediately, or wait until needed?

TopBun's picture
TopBun

Mill sprouted wheat immediately, or wait until needed?

I've recently started sprouting wheat and drying it in my dehydrator (with excellent results for flavor!) I have a grain mill to make the sprouted wheat flour, and I bake bread with 100% whole wheat.

Thus far I am storing the sprouted & dried berries until I'm ready to make bread, then mill as just much as I need for that bake. Is it better to do this, or to mill all the sprouted berries into flour immediately and store them for future use (within a few weeks)? Does it matter?

When I'm NOT using sprouted grains, of course I mill my flour on the spot in order to have the freshest possible whole wheat flour with little oxidation/bitterness. What I don't know is whether sprouting and drying the wheat berries changes this calculus. Would I be just as well off milling all the sprouted berries at once? That would be slightly more convenient.

Eric

barryvabeach's picture
barryvabeach

Eric,  I sprout, then dehydrate, then grind in bulk.  So some gets used right away, some goes into the freezer for storage.  I haven't noticed any big difference in outcome either way.  

TopBun's picture
TopBun

Thanks, Barry. Freezer is a good idea. 

I wonder if freshly-made sprouted wheat flour needs to be aged if not used immediately, in the same way as freshly milled non-sprouted berries (I think Reinhart and others recommend 2-3 weeks). Or if the sprouting process makes that unnecessary. Either way I rather doubt a home baker would notice a major difference. - Eric