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Spelt

Spelt

  

SPELT is the grain highest in proteins, lowest in phytic acids, easily digestible, if it is harvested by low yield traditional methods of old, it can be carried on long trips and still provides nourishment.

Spelt was the food the Roman armies carried with them to sustain them on their long tours. It is a grain with different amino acids than those contained in wheat. It is these amino acids that gives spelt its maximum assimilation. I think spelt is a wonderful grain for all humans, [unless one has celiac disease or is gluten intolerant, then corn, rice, buckwheat, millet, quinoa, lentils and amaranth preferable.]

                                                HISTORY OF SPELT               spelt foods for PKD polycystic kidney disease PLD polycystic liver disease
The mystic Hildegard von Bingen published her works on spelt, some 800 years ago. At that time it was unheard of for a woman to be allowed to publish or to be a learned person. It is a great accomplishment that we today have the availability of Hildegard's published works. Hildegard von Bingen, (St. Hildegard) had this to say about spelt: "The spelt is the best of grains. It is rich and nourishing and milder than other grain. It produces a strong body and healthy blood to those who eat it and it makes the spirit of man light and cheerful. If someone is ill boil some spelt, mix it with egg and this will heal him like a fine ointment." She claimed it gladden the heart.

Native to southern Europe, where it's been used for millenniums, spelt is an ancient Cereal Grain that has a mellow nutty flavor. I have noticed if I take the spelt grain and put it in the food processor to roughly grind it, then soak it and cook it, its taste resembles a bowl of warmed chopped nuts. Sometimes I add a date to it for a little sweetness. The easily digestible spelt has a slightly higher protein content than wheat and can be tolerated by those with wheat allergies. Spelt flour, available in health-food stores, can be substituted for wheat flour cup for cup in baked goods. Spelt has a fragile gluten content, making it easier to digest, especially by those who are wheat-sensitive. When something is difficult to digest, it begins to compromise the immune system. Because of spelt's incredibly hard hull, there is no need for pesticides, as insects cannot penetrate it. In Germany, the name for spelt is "dinkel" and was the basis for the names of such towns as Dinkelsbühl, Dinkelhausen, and Dinkelrode. In fact, the town of Dinkelsbühl has a museum devoted entirely to the grain; and, in the city park, there is a life-size monument of a farmer holding a sheath of spelt. Interestingly, more and more consumers are finding that they may be suffering from some type of wheat sensitivity. This sensitivity ranges from a severe allergic reaction to the gluten in wheat to more subtle symptoms such as lethargy or a bloated feeling coupled with weight gain. New diets based on blood types (see Eating Right 4 Your Type) recommend that type O people avoid all modern wheat and eat only Spelt. In theory, it is the modern makeup of t wheat and its history of breeding and hybridization to improve yield and baking characteristics that has contributed to the creation of a gluten that is no longer friendly to some people's bodies. Because of the different balance of the amino acids, Spelt is readily digestible by many people who have stopped eating wheat. However spelt does contain gluten and may cause symptoms with Celiac Disease. I have been baking spelt bread and I have discovered that when I bake non yeasted spelt bread this requires almost double the amount of flour as is contained in an airy yeast filled bread. One individual experimented to try to produce a whole grain bread that he baked himself that was less costly than the store bought variety. Here is his website.    Sometimes individuals allergic to wheat can eat spelt. Spelt flour can be used interchangeably with any recipe that calls for wheat flour; however spelt doesn't require as much water - if substituting spelt flour for wheat flour in a recipe, start by using only 3/4ths as much water.  Spelt is not gluten free.

This genetic engineering of transgenic wheat has resulted in a crop that is NO longer classifiable as a plant, but is now considered a genetically modified organism (GMO). Transgenic wheat has been and is being engineered to:

  • Produce greater yields
  • Improve quality
  • Be disease and insect resistant
  • Require less nitrogen to grow
  • Require less pesticides and herbicides
  • Increase the glutenin content
  • Be resistant to drought
  • Be tolerant of heat
  • Reduce wheat’s allergenicity
  • Increase the nutritional value
  • Be resistant to aluminium contamination of the soil
  • Enhance wheat’s lignans which may have anti-cancer properties and
  • Boost the human immune system using human genes!
  • Concerns about genetically engineered transgenic wheat include:

  • The introduction of DNA changes in humans that no one can predict.
  • The creation of super-weeds that will be resistant to herbicides as disease-resistance is transferred between plant species.
  • The creation of super-bugs as antibiotic resistance is transferred to microorganisms.
  • Contamination of conventional or organic crops, as wheat is pollinated by the wind.
  • In 1999 scientists in Thailand claimed to have found transgenic wheat in a grain shipment from the United States, even though at the time it had not been approved for sale and had only ever been grown in test plots.
  • The main claim is that such crops will require less pesticide, but so far this has proven unfounded and since the companies that provide the pesticides are the ones creating the transgenic crops, a conflict of interest has been observed.
  • Transgenic crops become the intellectual property of the company that created them and farmers using such crops have to agree to stringent conditions including being unable to collect the seeds to replant. Monsanto has engineered crops specifically to require the use of their fertilisers and this means that farmers in developing countries in particular can be held to ransom by large multinational corporations.
  • Transgenic wheat produced by Monsanto is currently being grown in Argentina and the United States and has passed in-house environmental risk assessments and US government regulatory agencies have approved its use. Reception in the developed world has been cool and farmers have been concerned about the saleability of transgenic crops.
  • This has led Monsanto to appear to have set its sights upon penetrating the developing world markets – starting with India.
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    last updated: Sunday, November 27, 2011 8:50 AM