De-Huller/Sprout & Salad Spinner
made by OXO
Its full name is Good Grips Little Salad & Herb Spinner - but to us Sproutpeople, it's a De-Huller.
It is made - as are all OXO products - extremely well. It measures 8 inches in diameter, 5 inches tall. Its Capacity = 2 Quarts
FOR USE WITH THESE SEEDS/CROPS
Leafy Sprouts
Brassica Sprouts
Greens
Micro-Greens
and leafy vegetables, of course.
Hull Removal
De-hulling is the process of removing hulls (seed coats) from your finished sprouts.
We didn't de-hull much during our years as professional sprout growers. We never bother with Beans, we brush what we can off of our Greens (by holding the tray at a 90°
angle and rubbing a hand back and forth over the tops of the plants), and since we grew our Leafy sprouts vertically, the hulls fell off naturally as we rinsed (though we
did "shave" them if they needed it - which is really fun!). Now that we are home sprouters only, we usually de-hull our Leafy sprouts, but the only sprouts we always
de-hull are Brassicas. Their hulls are quite big (relative to the size of their sprout) and retain too much moisture - which can lessen the shelf life of the sprouts.
The sprouts which are typically candidates for De-hulling are grown from Dicot seeds. Seeds whose 1st leaves (cotyledons (ko-ta-LEE-den)) are the seed
itself (Alfalfa, Clover, Brassicas and many garden Beans just to name a few) will shed
their hull as the leaves unfurl. Any gardener will know from watching a Bean grow - the plant pokes up through the ground looking like a bean on the end of a stem.
The bean on the end of the stem splits in two in short order. That bean is now called the plant's cotyledons. True Leaves will follow and
the cotyledons will fall off or die as the plant grows - having done their job - as a seed - being the storage vessel for all of the nutrients needed to
germinate and grow the plant to a point where it could gather it's nutrients from the Earth and Sun.
In sprouting we grow plants no further then the
cotyledons, and then only with certain seeds. The hulls which are left behind vary from sprout to sprout in regards to texture and density. some seeds -
like the Brassicas (Broccoli, Radish, Cabbage, etc.) shed very thick hulls which , if not removed can shorten the
storage of your sprouts due to their moisture content. Alfalfa and Clover, as well as Mung Beans have very thin
hulls which in no way effect the shelf life of your sprouts, but some people prefer to dispose of them for aesthetic or textural reasons. We leave our Mung's hulls alone and remove our Leafy sprout's
hulls only sometimes. In neither case do the hulls decrease the storage life of the crop.
Other sprouts also produce
hulls. Lentils and Peas - if grown long enough - will shed their hulls as well.
In both cases they are not shed from the cotyledon but from the seed which in field planting stays where it is planted - growing a root down and a plant up from that point.
That type of seed is called Monocot. Both of these produce rather thick hulls which you may wish to remove. We don't grow them long enough for the
hulls to fall off so we do not remove them, and in any case, we consider the hulls completely acceptable and to be a good source of fibre. You decide for yourself -
the method is the same for any sprout - - though frankly, it works poorly for beans - they just don't separate from their hulls well and uniformly enough. Experiment though - - it can't hurt and learning is after all life's main pursuit, no?

The Sprout/Salad Spinner Method
This method simplifies the de-hulling process and allows you to refrigerate your sprouts immediately afterwards. And it's fun too, and there is so little sprout paraphernalia....