We have brought our grow table out of the garage and set it up in our basement. This will be our 3rd attempt and things went very well last year. I thought about you guys immediately and decided to try and post an as-it-happens series. If anyone has been daunted by sprouting or starting your own seeds, this could be a chance to leap in and make some mistakes. Also, we are highly experimental and would love feed-back if you have questions or ideas to contribute, please do.
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a low cost operation |
Sprouts are a great activity to try in the winter. They take up next to no space, the consequences of failure are exceedingly small, and they provide a great learning opportunity for adults and kids. Did I mention that they are super healthy and delicious? You could be eating your own sprouts THIS WEEK if you start now :)
I'm starting you off with alfalfa. It is cheap, easy to sprout and has a nice, neutral, fresh green taste. You can diversify into all kinds of sprouting, eventually. My seeds came from
Dad's Nutrition Centre on 8th St.
I've put 2 tablespoons of seed into a 1L pickle jar (you could use just about anything, but clear is best). Add enough water to cover them. Let them sit in the dark for several hours. I put mine on top of the fridge since the warm air from the coils makes it a bit warmer than the rest of our chilly house.
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style counts!!! |
After the seeds sit for a few hours (over night is better), start the rinsing cycle. I've taken a spare piece of nylon screen (cheese-cloth would work) and hold it on with a stylish pink rubber band recovered from the broccoli we buy. Dump the water out, rinse and let drain. You will want to rinse them a couple of times a day (three if you have any molding issues). It takes about 10 seconds so remembering is really the tricky part. Whatever works with your schedule--Before and after work then before bed would be lots.
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My seeds draining into a glass bread pan |
That's it! Rinse them for 4-7 days. how long will depend on temperature. When they are fluffy and filling your container give them a final rinse. If you don't want to eat the unsprouted seeds, you may remove the spouts from the jar for the final rinse. Let them sit their last day on a sunny window, or under your grow light (that's why you wanted a clear container). This lets the leaves green up and adds some great nutrition. Then just pop them in the fridge or eat them on the spot.
If you eat them a lot, start a batch every 3-4 days. They are great on hot-dogs/tofu-dogs, salads, sandwiches, even some soups.