Brown Rice Sprouts
Sprouted Brown Rice will probably still need to be cooked after sprouting (it is too crunchy when raw - for us anyway) - but it is faster to cook and tastier too, and of course more nutritious. Rice is nice. @:-)
Alert me if this item is restocked.
We often restock popular items or they may be returned by the other customers. If you would like to be notified when this happens just enter your details below.
Brown Rice Sprouts
We respect your privacy and don't share your email with anybody.
Alert me if this item is restocked
We have cancelled your request.
Vitamins B, C and E
Calcium, Iron, Magnesium, Pantothenic Acid, Phosphorus
Amino Acids
Protein: 15%
The amount of Brown Rice Sprouts produced by 1 unit of Seed. For Example 2:1 means that 1 pound of Seed will produce 2 pounds of Sprouts or whatever crop you are growing. You do not have to grow them all at once of course, unless you wish to =:-D
The time it takes to grow a finished 2 - 4 days, or other crop (Micro-Greens, Grass, Greens) from a dry Seed. Note: This "finished" Sprout is our preference. you may grow them for as long as you want! In fact, we suggest that you taste them at every rinse to discover when you like them best.
Alert me if this item is restocked.
We often restock popular items or they may be returned by the other customers. If you would like to be notified when this happens just enter your details below.
Brown Rice Sprouts
We respect your privacy and don't share your email with anybody.
Alert me if this item is restocked
We have cancelled your request.
How to Grow Brown Rice Sprouts
- Soak 1/3 to 1 cup of rice in cool water for 12 hours.
- Drain off soak water.
- Rinse thoroughly.
- Drain thoroughly.
- Rinse and Drain with cool water every 8-12 hours.
- Rice Sprouts don't need light. Keep your Sprouter in a low light location.
- Harvest on day 2 or 3, when most of the grains have short roots. Refrigerate your crop.
Brown Rice Soaked for 12 hours, then Rinsed and Drained.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle. You can be done - or go....
12 hours more.... Harvest Time!
A close-up which shows just how little the sprout will be.
Brown Rice Soaked for 12 hours, then Rinsed and Drained.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle. You can be done - or go....
12 hours more.... Harvest Time!
A close-up which shows just how little the sprout will be.
Yields approximately 1 Cup (1/2 lb.) of Sprouts
Prep 2/3 cup of seed* then transfer (if necessary) into a bowl or into your Sprouter. Add 2-3 times as much cool (60°-70°) water. Mix seeds up to assure even water contact for all. Allow seeds to Soak for 4-24 hours. (read Rice Note directly below for specifics on the Rice you are sprouting.)
Rice Note: ANYtime we soak ANY seed for longer than 12 hours, we change the water. when your first 12 hours is done: Drain off the soak water, Rinse the seeds and refill with fresh water. Continue soaking. It is extremely rare to soak longer than 12 hours, but Brown Rice is a seed that can usually take it. We suggest that you try your first batch with a 12 hour Soak and see how you like the results. You can try the longer Soak on future crops. That way you'll know the differences and which you prefer. Wehani and Red Thai will sprout well after an 8-12 hour Soak. Wild Rice will split after a short Soak and frankly, we've never seen a sprout on it, but it is SO GOOD we don't care. We Soak it for about 4 hours. It is the one rice we actually eat raw. It is still plenty chewy, but it's quite good. Lori loves it!
Empty the seeds into your Sprouter (if necessary). Drain off the soak water. You may water plants or use it in stock if you like - it has nutrients in it. Rinse thoroughly with cool (60°-70°) water. Drain thoroughly!
Set your Sprouter anywhere out of direct sunlight and at room temperature (70° is optimal) between Rinses. This is where your sprouts do their growing. We use a counter top - in the corner of our kitchen, but where the sprouter won't get knocked over by cats, dogs, kids or us. We don't mind the indirect sunlight or the 150 watts of incandescent light, because light just does not matter much. A plant can only perform photosynthesis when it has leaves. Until then light has little if any effect. Sprouts also happen to like air-circulation, so don't hide your sprouts.
Rinse and Drain again in 8-12 hours. And, perhaps one more... Rinse and Drain in 8-12 hours. And, if you like one more... Rinse and Drain in 8-12 hours.
We usually stop here (or sooner if we have roots). We like our rice sprouts small (actually we don't even care if rice sprouts. A bulging germ is more than good enough for us. Once a seed takes in its fill of water it is alive and therefore nutritionally superior.
Harvest Your sprouts are done 8-12 hours after your final Rinse. Be sure to Drain them as thoroughly as possible after that final Rinse. The goal during the final 8-12 hours is to minimize the surface moisture of your sprouts - they will store best in your refrigerator if they are dry to the touch.
Refrigerate Transfer the sprout crop to a plastic bag or the sealed container of your choice. We have Produce Storage Bags that will extend shelf life substantially.
* If using Sproutpeople's Single Harvest Pack - use the whole bag. It will produce a crop of approximately 8 ounces.
These seeds yield approximately 1.5:1 - which means the sprouts will weigh one-and-one-half times as much as the seed you start with, so you can theoretically start with 2/3 as much dry seed as your Sprouter's capacity, though we always suggest you leave more room - especially when you are new to a crop.
Brown Rice: Short grain is usually the way to go as the seed is more likely to be intact (un-broken), which is always best, but there are times when long-grain is as good. We always offer the best sprouting rice we can get regardless of grain size. Brown Rice must be cooked (1 part water:1 part rice, for 15 minutes) - it just is not tender enough to eat as a raw sprout (for most people - - well - - for us anyway).
Rice produces a bulging germ or a tiny sprout - but cooks up more quickly and has greater nutritional benefit (like all sprouts - yes, even when cooked sprouts are way nutritious) and it is sweeter!
Seed Storage
Rice is best stored in a cool location - at Sproutpeople, we keep it in a freezer. If you plan on storing it for more than 3 months you should use a cool location, because, it is, on ocassion pleasing to a particular pest - the Indian Meal Moth, which can appear out of nowhere when conditions are right (hot). These are organic seeds after all, so there is no other way to keep your seeds absolutely safe, except to freeze them. Consider yourself a tad smarter =:-}
Happy Sprouting!
Recommended Sprouters for Brown Rice Sprouts
This rice is so flavorful and easy to sprout. I do cook mine after sprouting but it's so much quicker. I use my rice cooker on the normal white rice setting and this sprouted rice comes out perfect!
This rice is so flavorful and easy to sprout. I do cook mine after sprouting but it's so much quicker. I use my rice cooker on the normal white rice setting and this sprouted rice comes out perfect!
Brown rice is sort of a pest to cook because it just takes so long...HOWEVER...when you sprout it that changes everything. Not only does it shorten the cooking time, but it sweetens the rice as well. It is SOOO much more delicious. I also found a little trick with my food dehydrator. I sprout extra and dehydrate the extra...I store the dehydrated/vacuum sealed rice and rehydrate with some water to use like instant rice when I'm short on time. You would never know it had been dehydrated as It tastes just as good. This is great quality brown rice and the flavor is superb!
Brown rice is sort of a pest to cook because it just takes so long...HOWEVER...when you sprout it that changes everything. Not only does it shorten the cooking time, but it sweetens the rice as well. It is SOOO much more delicious. I also found a little trick with my food dehydrator. I sprout extra and dehydrate the extra...I store the dehydrated/vacuum sealed rice and rehydrate with some water to use like instant rice when I'm short on time. You would never know it had been dehydrated as It tastes just as good. This is great quality brown rice and the flavor is superb!
There are lots of sources for organic brown rice. Sproutpeople's Organic Brown Rice has been the ONLY one that does not contain bugs. We tried buying in bulk from another source (sorry Gil) and the bag was full of bug dust. We tried to sprout the rice and it wouldn't. SP's seeds are also fat and roundish, while the other's were skinnier seeds. These cook up nicely in our rice cooker I have to admit, this Sprouted Brown Rice seems sweeter also.