After seven years of writing, I'm really happy to report that the first 2 volumes in the Kitchen Sink Farming series are up on amazon!
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=ntt_athr_dp_sr_1?_encoding=UTF8&field-author=Jean-Pierre%20Parent&search-alias=books&sort=relevancerank
Easily and Cheaply Grow and Ferment Your Own Food for a Healthier Now and Greener Future
Monday, April 29, 2013
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Sprouting Flax, from "Appendix A: The Wide World of Sprouts - List of Sprout-able Seeds", Kitchen Sink Farming (out soon!)
Flax
Flax might be one of the
most important sprouts for health, as it contains six essential ingredients
that are commonly missing from the modern diet.
It is unparalleled as a source of essential fatty acids, both kinds of
dietary fiber, anti-oxidant lignans, and is an easily-assimilable complete
protein. And of course, enzymes when sprouted.
It’s also surpassingly easy to sprout
and tastes wonderful. Everyone should
should slowly build up to eating a few tablespoons once or twice every day.
Flax seed is one-third oil and the rest is a
combination of fiber, protein and “mucilage”, a gummy, slippery substance that
makes jar or bag sprouting impossible.
Flax must be sprouted with the long-soak or clay methods, which are
actually the easiest ways to sprout; just put some flax seeds in a bowl, cover
them with water, and in a day many of them will have broken their brown or
golden seed coats and sprouted tiny tails.
Flax oil is one of the best source of the rare but essential fatty acid
(EFA) omega-3, necessary for good brain
function and higher intelligence, mood elevation, inflammation reduction,
proper mental development in children, but most importantly (kidding),
beautiful skin and hair. (more on EFAs on
pgs XX-XXX)
The protein in flax seeds is easily digested
and contains all the amino acids needed for building and maintaining a strong
body. Flax’s insoluble fiber comes from the shell acts like a broom, sweeping
the colon of toxic material, impacted waste and dried mucus. Flax fiber is
excellent nourishment for friendly bacteria in the intestine, which keep
disease-causing organisms in check.
Twelve percent of flax seeds is mucilage which makes it a gentle,
non-irritating, natural laxative. Flax mucilage is perfect for those who have a
sensitive stomach, acting as a buffer for excess stomach acids, soothing ulcers
or irritable bowel disorders. Dry flax absorbs 20 times its volume in water and
can seriously dehydrate a person and become lodged in the colon; sprouting
flaxseeds is the best way to enjoy its host of benefits.
Flax is available in two varieties: brown,
which is higher in omega-3s and has a harder shell, and golden, which is softer
and has a sweeter and milder flavor. If
you don’t have a high-speed blender, use the golden seeds, because the brown
need to be pretty well pulverized, otherwise they can pass through the
digestive system intact.
In low-temp baking, the mucilaginous aspect
of flax makes it a great substitute for sticky gluten in sprouted loaves. Lightly sprouted ground flax seeds make a
light and creamy, mild flavored bread with a spongy quality which makes living
tortillas or elastic Ethiopian Injera bread possible. Add a little or a lot of sprouted Kamut or
spelt for a more sticky and dense loaf, which will require several times longer
to cook. Include some to the pulp
leftover from juicing and dehydrate it to make crackers, or add it to young coconut
meat to make flexible, thin wraps more pliable than tortillas and nori.
Method:
Long Soak or Clay Method
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Essential Fatty Acids: Soft Skin, Quick Thinking, and Graceful Aging
Essential fatty acids, or EFAs, carry a
slightly negative charge and spread out as a thin, even layer over surfaces. This makes cell membranes soft, fluid and
flexible, allowing nutrients to flow in and wastes out. EFAs produce detectable bioelectrical
currents, which make possible the vast number of chemical reactions in the body
like nerve, muscle and membrane function.
This living current is also a measurable difference between alive and
dead tissue, and fact of interest in many fields of study, I would think.
EFAs absorb sunlight and attract
oxygen; a plentiful supply of oxygen, carried by blood to our cells is
fundamental for vitality, pain relief and healing - EFAs are able to hold onto
this oxygen at the cells’ boundaries, making a barrier against viruses and
bacteria. Beneficial bacteria are great
in our digestive systems, which aren’t really considered to be inside our
bodies, because they’re not sterile - we don’t want any bacteria crossing into
our blood or cells, and because EFAs help prevent that they are vital for our
immune systems. Because fats are the
second most abundant substance in the body (water is first), high-quality EFAs
are also important in countless and varied metabolic reactions in the body like
fat burning, food absorption, mental health and growth ,
making them especially important for children. They can substantially shorten the time required for
recovery of fatigued muscles after exercise or physical work. Eczema is a
severe allergic inflammation, and through their partnership with oxygen, EFAs
scavenge allergens from the blood, decreasing inflammation and bringing
suppleness and a youthful appearance to the skin. Modern medicine is discovering more and more
than many modern health problems are the result of inflammation, so an
anti-inflammatory diet with plenty of EFAs is essential for health, especially
as we age.
The absorption of sunlight is a curse,
however, when the EFA is outside of the living seed. LNA (Alpha
Linolenic Acid, an omega-3 EFA), for example, is about five times more
reactive to light than LA (Linoleic Acid, an
omega-6 EFA). Light increases LNA's ability to react with oxygen by a
thousand times. The unsaturated fatty acids with more cis- bonds, like
omega-3s, are extremely sensitive to light and will spoil rapidly when exposed
to it. So the special nature of the EFAs
that make them essential to life - the absorption of oxygen and transformation
of solar energy - causes them to decompose when left exposed to air and light,
like when seeds are ground and packaged as in the case of flours.
When EFAs and their highly unsaturated
long-chain fatty acid cousins are open to the elements, free radical reactions
start to take place. Just one photon of
light can start a destructive game of telephone, breaking bonds down the line
until it peters out around the 30,000 mark.
The incomplete molecules join together forming new and toxic
compounds. Nature to the rescue:
protection from these free-radical toxins is supplied by the fat-soluble
vitamins such as A and E, which trap these light-caused chain reactions before
they get out of control (and become denatured themselves). These powerful anti-oxidants are always found
in concert with EFAs in whole seeds, the perfect container for what might be
the body’s most vital nutrients.
At best, the refining, bottling,
cooking, shipping and storing of EFAs renders them unusable or non-existent,
and they can quite easily become carcinogenic.
By far the best way to include these vital nutrients in our diets is to
sprout the troika of seeds high in EFAs: hemp, flax, and chia, which will offer
them the 3-part protection of the seed’s shell, free-radical scavengers, and
living tissues. It’s also (surprise,
surprise) the cheapest way: 3 tablespoons of sprouted flaxseed contain 6 grams
of omega-3s, the recommended daily allowance, for about 6 cents, in contrast to
the 2 dollar shot of bottled EFAs from companies like Udo’s Choice and
Barleans. Chia provides even more, and
of course, both are whole seeds and therefore supply countless other benefits.
All three kinds of EFAs (omegas 3, 6,
and 9) are necessary, but special care must be taken to get enough 3. Omegas 6 is quite plentiful, available pretty
much wherever fats are sold, and we need very little of omega 9, so unless
you’re eating one bite of celery a day so you can be a prima ballerina, chances
are you’re fine. But as important as
EFAs are to health, the really important thing is the ratio of EFAs to each other.
The optimal proportion of the 3 and 6 EFAs is 1 omega-3 to 4 omega-6s,
1:4, but the standard modern diet is more often a ratio of 1 to 20 or
more. This imbalance causes the body to
make fat-soluble hormones called prostaglandins to deal with the excess 6’s,
wasting valuable globular proteins and essentially creating toxins out of unusable
fats. Adult acne is usually created, or
at least exacerbated, by this imbalance. This I know from experience, breaking out like crazy when I (as I slowly discovered) ate foods with an over-abundance of omega-6's, avocados and cashews especially. This is why I try to steer raw food chefs away from these ingredients, which seem to be in just about every dish on raw food menus - more like a crutch than an opportunity to feel amazing and alive. Cashews are in fact not raw, but more importantly have little nutritional benefit and a few major drawbacks, such as the toxins and allergens they contain. One of these, urushiol, is the same irritant found in poison ivy, a relative of cashews.
Whenever you eat anything with an excess of omega-6 EFAs (also called oleic or linoleic acids), like cashews, peanuts, olives and oil, almonds, zucchini, or avocados, make sure to add some sprouted flax, chia, or hemp seed (or oil) to the meal to balance out the fats in a healthier ratio.
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