Oat Sprouts
Raw Nebraska Hulless Oats
Hulless, tender and very quick to sprout. These are a wonderfully tender grain with a mild sweetness. Raw, not cooked, not heated, not Hulled, not Groats. Hulless.
Note: these are the same seeds we sell for Oat Grass.
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Oat Sprouts
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Vitamins B, C and E
Calcium, Iron, Magnesium, Niacin, Phosphorus, Potassium
Amino Acids
Protein: 15%
Soothing, chewy and mild, gluten-free. Great for breakfast, late night cereal snack, in raw breads and dehyrdated raw cookies.
The amount of Oat 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 1 - 3 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.
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Oat Sprouts
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How to Grow Oat Sprouts
- Soak 1/3 to 1 cup of grain in cool water for 30-60 minutes.
- Drain off soak water. Do not ever soak again.
- Rinse thoroughly.
- Drain Thoroughly.
- Rinse and Drain with cool water every 8-12 hours.
- Grain Sprouts don't need light. Keep your Sprouter in a relatively low light location.
- Harvest on day 2 or 3, when most of the grains have short roots. Refrigerate your crop.
Dry Oats await their Soak.
30-60 minutes later... Soaked, Rinsed and Drained.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle. You can be done - if you haven't eaten them already, or keep on sprouting.
12 hours later, and another Rinse/Drain cycle. You can be done - now, before, or in another 12 hours.
Dry Oats await their Soak.
30-60 minutes later... Soaked, Rinsed and Drained.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle.
12 hours later... another Rinse/Drain cycle. You can be done - if you haven't eaten them already, or keep on sprouting.
12 hours later, and another Rinse/Drain cycle. You can be done - now, before, or in another 12 hours.
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 30 - 60 Minutes. 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. They 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, possibly once more... Rinse and Drain in 8-12 hours.
We usually stop here (or sooner if we have any root at all). We like our Grain Sprouts very small.
Depending on your climate and the time of year you are sprouting and most importantly your personal preference - You may Rinse and Drain again at 8-12 hour intervals for several days. However - we prefer to sprout only to the point where most of the seeds have sprouted tiny (1/16 - 1/4 inch) roots. That is typically after just 2 or 3 Rinse and Drain cycles, though it can happen after just one.
As always, we suggest that you taste your crop at EVERY Rinse - including the very first - just after the Soak period. The soaked seeds are already alive and though they may not be their most nutritious they are very close. We're talking seriously nutritious - they are already without enzyme inhibitors (a very good thing indeed) so they'll digest themselves and nourish your cells without requiring anything from your body!
Grow them for as long as you like (as long as you continue to Rinse and Drain every 8-12 hours) and find out for yourself when they are most delicious! If you grow for more than a couple days, you'll have Grass growing as well as roots.
Experiment! Have Fun! It's All Good!
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.
Note: Grains do not store well in refrigeration so you should try to grow just what you need. It isn't actually that they store poorly, it is just that grains are cool weather crops, so though they slow down quite a bit, they continue to grow - even in the refrigerator.
* 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.
These are Hulless Oats - they are a very fast sprout are a wonderfully tender grain with a mild sweetness.
These are fresh off the farm in Nebraska.
They are NOT Groats.
They are NOT heated.
They ARE RAW Hulless OATS.
We love these as a breakfast cereal!
Seed Shelf Life: 2 years. Store in cool, dark, dry spot. Store in freezer to extend shelf life.
Oats are best stored in a cool location - at home, we keep ours in a freezer, but a refrigerator works well too. If you plan on storing it for more than 6 months you should use one of these cool locations. Also, Oats are, 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 armed - with knowledge =:-}
Happy Sprouting!
Recommended Sprouters for Oat Sprouts
These are so tasty. I had found and tried some "naked oats" from another place and hardly any sprouted. I thought I was going to save some money but ended up wasting . The quality of these oats are well worth it. Definitely recommend. I have also gotten these in the oats and groats mix. I equally recommend that as well.
These are so tasty. I had found and tried some "naked oats" from another place and hardly any sprouted. I thought I was going to save some money but ended up wasting . The quality of these oats are well worth it. Definitely recommend. I have also gotten these in the oats and groats mix. I equally recommend that as well.
I got over a 90% sprouting rate, and they were tender and ready to go (~⅛" long roots) in 1½ days. They're kind of expensive (thus four stars for value instead of five), and I realize this is from a single batch, but these groats are high quality.
Sproutpeople response: Thanks Tim. I just have to say - our Oats are NOT groats. Groat means "hulled". Hulled Oats do not germinate well. We sell Whole Hulless Oats. It's a hard seed to find and like most things nowadays - not inexpensive. Happy Sprouting!
I got over a 90% sprouting rate, and they were tender and ready to go (~⅛" long roots) in 1½ days. They're kind of expensive (thus four stars for value instead of five), and I realize this is from a single batch, but these groats are high quality.
Sproutpeople response: Thanks Tim. I just have to say - our Oats are NOT groats. Groat means "hulled". Hulled Oats do not germinate well. We sell Whole Hulless Oats. It's a hard seed to find and like most things nowadays - not inexpensive. Happy Sprouting!