Hulless Oats Small Scale Processing

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  • čas přidán 20. 01. 2023
  • This year we grew oats instead of a lawn. Growing oats means they need to processed before they can be eaten. Growing small scale allows you to learn the entire process including processing and the final goal...eating! This was a super fun project. We learned alot and now use these oats as well as sorghum for bread, pancakes and crackers!
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Komentáře • 49

  • @cassell1540
    @cassell1540 Před rokem +4

    Awesome job, I am planning to grow some grain down the road as we expand our homestead, we are currently building a passive solar off grid house on our south facing slope and we are in the process of planning a 30 foot passive solar greenhouse sunken into the hillside. I have been inspired by permaculture and have been planning to move into a more sustainable way of living for many years. We decided last year to take the plunge and move back to Newfoundland and begin the transition, I still work full time and we are doing all this work on our own to make it affordable to our tight budget. Things are coming along well and we should be moving in before Christmas 2023 if we can stay on track. Thanks for your valuable content, it’s very important work in my opinion.
    Our homestead is in the Clarenville area, 20 minutes outside of town. Keep up the great work.

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +1

      Hi Leroy, thanks for following along. Producing grain by hand puts a whole new perspective on how intensive it is without machinery. That being said, the planting and waiting parts are pretty easy! Sounds like you’re planning an awesome property. I do wish I had built my greenhouse at least 40’. I would have overwintered citrus, and bananas. Thanks for your support and good luck with the homestead!

  • @David-kd5mf
    @David-kd5mf Před rokem +1

    Thanks for making this video. I'm growing hulless oats for first time this spring

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +2

      They’re a good crop to grow. Especially if you want to get an appreciation for harvest and processing. It gives you a real appreciation for grain production. It’s quite time laborious.

  • @TeacherMom80
    @TeacherMom80 Před rokem +3

    How big of a garden do I need to produce a reasonable amount of oats to make it worth the time? I have a bag of hull less oats to plant from Johnny Seeds, but my family eats a lot of oatmeal. How big of a garden to fill a 5lb bucket do you think? Thanks for your helpful video. 😊

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +2

      Theoretically one could grow about 32 lbs on 1000 sq ft under the right conditions. My yield is about half of that but I don’t do any type of management. No watering or weeding.

  • @michaeliiensing4023
    @michaeliiensing4023 Před 4 měsíci

    What square footage are you planning oats and what’s the yield

  • @glennbrooks3449
    @glennbrooks3449 Před rokem +1

    The finished product looks good. Too bad we don,t have some large scale farms here in Nl.

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem

      I agree. Oats work well here, no problem fitting them into our growing season.

    • @JellybeanHouseNewfoundland
      @JellybeanHouseNewfoundland Před rokem +1

      I strongly believe that the way of the future is in having a large number of small diversified farms that can each be worked by hand by just a few people. Large-scale agriculture involves much more expense due to the need for mechanization and inevitably involves degradation of the soil. Due to the lack of overhead, small farms that use only human power are actually more efficient and more profitable than large farms, and if more people could get back into food production, there would be more employment in rural areas and fewer people having to migrate to urban areas to look for work--plus we would take better care of our land if we focused more on producing food than on producing money. Another benefit of small farms is that they can exist in places like Newfoundland, where there aren't many large expanses of non-rocky, "arable" soil. A small farm using natural agriculture techniques (no plowing) can exist almost anywhere, even on a steep hillside. These small farms wouldn't be making anyone rich, but they would protect families and communities from falling into real poverty by creating local self-sufficiency.

  • @KimberlyKling
    @KimberlyKling Před měsícem

    Thanks for this great video! What kind of mill are you using at the end?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před měsícem

      that one is a wondermill jr. deluxe. decent grinder, one day ill electrify it.

  • @kelseyvoit4460
    @kelseyvoit4460 Před rokem

    Thanks for showing this process! Do you have a blueprint for your DIY winnowing vacuum tool?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem

      I don't actually. I plan on building a seed separator next year. like this one czcams.com/video/dJdXowuYLpk/video.html

  • @user-qv9ii1lw1g
    @user-qv9ii1lw1g Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the video. I have a dehuller for barley. Would it be too much for oats?. Also, when you are grinding the oats, it is the same kind of grinder as for wheat berries? And do I need to grind it for breakfast oatmeal?. Not sure what kind of grinder you have there. Thank you.

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před 11 měsíci

      You only need to thresh and winnow for these oats. The grinder I use is a wondermill junior deluxe. Works perfect and I set it on a coarse grind for cereal. I typically use 1/3 of a cup f coarse ground oats to 1
      Cup of water soaked overnight. Cook for 15 mins in the morning!

  • @whbeng
    @whbeng Před rokem

    Thank you for the video. Where did you find your seed, and did you just broadcast it?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem

      Hi William, I used a drop spreader for seeding. Much cleaner and was ably to distribute only in the area I wanted seeded. I got the seed from a Facebook follower. It’s not easy to find this variety.

  • @ronallens6204
    @ronallens6204 Před 11 měsíci +1

    So you did oats without dehulling them ? Only threshing and grinding ?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před 11 měsíci +2

      Thresh, winnow and then ready for grinding. No dehulling as they are hulless.

  • @VickyHammond-di8rs
    @VickyHammond-di8rs Před rokem

    Cool video! I was especially impressed with the winnowing rig. Can you tell me the name/source of the mill you are using. Keep the videos coming!

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +1

      Hi Vicky, we use the wondermill jr. we ordered ours from briden solutions online. Thanks for following along. More videos to come. I’ve been a slacker lately. Needed some rest after a long growing/harvest season!

    • @glennbrooks3449
      @glennbrooks3449 Před rokem +1

      @@TheHomesteadatFlatrock I can certainly understand what you mean by rest. I planted 760 potatoes last year by hand. Also grew cabbages, parsnip , fencing,etc. After the growing comes the preserving. ( more work ) So far this past fall /winter I have hauled 11 dump trailer loads of kelp and 17 loads towed behind a Quad. So I understand the rest part.

    • @LisaSmith-df6yq
      @LisaSmith-df6yq Před rokem +1

      Did you make the winnowing machine? If so how did you make it, or where did you purchase? Thanks

  • @andrewnichols1240
    @andrewnichols1240 Před rokem +1

    I'm still confused? You said there's hulless and oats with hulls? I'd guess mine is with. Guess I'd need an additional process?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem

      yes there are several types. Hulless and hulled. Hulless oats have not hulls once threshed. Hulled oats do. You need a dehuller to remove the hulls before grinding hulled oats.

  • @888zz999
    @888zz999 Před 6 měsíci

    If one just wants oats for flour, can one include some hulls in with the groats to be ground into flour? Or will these hulls mess up your grinder? Thanks

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před 6 měsíci +1

      the hulls don't easily grind. they leave little hard fibers. you want to get it mostly hull free before you grind

    • @888zz999
      @888zz999 Před 6 měsíci

      @@TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      Thanks for the reply. I'm lucky enough to have one of those high speed flour grinders that sounds like a jet taking off. Do you think this type of grinder would give the same result? It does well with rice and sorghum. Would these little hard fibers be noticeable in say bread or cake? TIA

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@888zz999 I have a hand type grinder with stones, hard to say, if it used blades instead of grinding, it may work. You could try using a small amount to see
      What happens

    • @888zz999
      @888zz999 Před 6 měsíci

      @@TheHomesteadatFlatrock Yes, if I had a small amount I would ;-). I think I'll go ahead and buy some raw 'nuda to grow anyway. Looks like it might be more doable for home processing (great video). And try the 'sativa if I come across some. There's some info out there that suggests including powdered hulls for other nutritional needs. Thanks!

  • @David-kd5mf
    @David-kd5mf Před rokem +2

    Where did you purchase the hand crank mill that you used on the oats? Who makes it?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +1

      This is. A wondermill jr. I bought it through briden solutions.

    • @SweetCakeLover
      @SweetCakeLover Před rokem

      ​@@TheHomesteadatFlatrock Hi, does the mill use stone plates? Or is this stainless steel? Thanks!

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem

      @@SweetCakeLover it comes with both! Stone planted for grinding flour, steel plates for nut butters and things like masa.

  • @chucksanders5515
    @chucksanders5515 Před rokem

    I think it would be less problem if he went to the dollar store bought a very course hair brush and just combed through it...........might be faster. also pulsing your food processor would mill it . if you have hulls they have food processor blades that are dull plastic that will beat the seed free then you lightly blow it to get rid of the hulls.

    • @itsno1duh
      @itsno1duh Před rokem

      I thought similar, a heavily toothed dog grooming tool might do it. thx for the plastic blade idea, I bet it would make quick work of getting the chaff free and then normal winnowing.

  • @msaunders908
    @msaunders908 Před rokem

    What is the yield in lb. per sq. ft. of oats planted?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +3

      In theory, about 53 lbs per 1000 sq ft. I got about half of that but it was a dry summer, I didn’t water it. I just let it do it’s thing.

    • @msaunders908
      @msaunders908 Před rokem

      @@TheHomesteadatFlatrock Thank you!

  • @mikefinley4367
    @mikefinley4367 Před rokem

    With the glasses and hat, you could pass for a fill in for Billy Bob Thornton in his younger days like the movie Armageddon. Great video but research reveals it's very hard to get oat seed for human consumption so I'm wondering how you managed?

    • @TheHomesteadatFlatrock
      @TheHomesteadatFlatrock  Před rokem +1

      I remember that move from some years ago, I can kind of see the resemblence! These seed came from a grower that has been growing it for a long time, without herbicides or pesticides. He offered to send me some and I accepted his offer!

    • @mikefinley4367
      @mikefinley4367 Před rokem

      @@TheHomesteadatFlatrock Best keep him a friend for life. In the USA it's so messed up if another person doesn't even sell but gives you seed from nog agriculture there are restrictions against doing so. Hell, in the Obama healthcare bill made law there's all kinds of garbage snuck in including all home gardening to be GMO and inspected by a new bunch of inspectors who can issue fines if you sell the produce or grains with anyone including relatives and neighbors. Violations go to extremes of property seizure. Seriously, imagine a neighbor down in hard times and your not allowed to help a person out, pathetic. Now with his vice president as president there's a scam for home and community garden registry. This is actually like a gun registry. The part people don't realize is f martial law is declared food storage is one of the things to be confiscated so they can shove Thier garden registry where the sun doesn't shine.

    • @JellybeanHouseNewfoundland
      @JellybeanHouseNewfoundland Před rokem +1

      @@mikefinley4367 That is not quite correct. The "People's Garden" registry is completely voluntary and aims only to connect people with others in their communities and with resources for sustainable garden practices. No one is required to register, crops are certainly not expected to be GMO, the focus is on community education, and sharing is encouraged! In fact, it's the whole point. I am in the U.S. and don't plan to register my garden, because I don't need to do so in order to share with my community and I prefer privacy and like to stay out of politics completely (I do agree that politicians always have ulterior motives, and I think that those on all ends of the spectrum are right about some things and wrong about others and that we all need to start listening to each other instead of demonizing each other), but it actually sounds like a good effort to help make communities less reliant on large-scale industrial agriculture. Whether you can sell your garden produce locally would depend on your local zoning requirements. In my town, during and right after the pandemic, they actually made it legal for anyone to sell produce and even value-added food products to other locals without needing agricultural zoning, an inspected commercial kitchen, etc., and we voted, on a referendum, to guarantee the right to local food, including keeping animals in city backyards.

    • @mikefinley4367
      @mikefinley4367 Před rokem

      @@JellybeanHouseNewfoundland It's voluntary now, scream later.

    • @JellybeanHouseNewfoundland
      @JellybeanHouseNewfoundland Před rokem

      @@mikefinley4367 You are probably right. I am wary of any initiative that comes from the top down. We need to build our lives and our community resilience from the bottom up and get away, as much as possible, from the worship of money and power as the highest goods. Of course those who have the money and power want us to be easy to control so that they can have more money and power. That is true of every government just about everywhere in the world (with the possible exception of a few tiny ones in small countries).The culture of fear and the attitude of scarcity and competition are some the ways they manipulate us and prevent us from building true communities, so let's be fearless--even when the odds don't seem to be in our favor--in building trust in the power of ordinary people to build a different world. Ironically, when our current top-heavy structures eventually collapse under their own weight, it will be the little people (and I hope I will be one of them!) who are more self-sufficient and have close relationships with others in their communities who survive better than the people who have heaps of dollars in the bank and fancy titles but no life skills and no relationships that are not based on profit and exploitation.

  • @beautyabasiekong6381
    @beautyabasiekong6381 Před rokem

    What is grains

  • @beautyabasiekong6381
    @beautyabasiekong6381 Před rokem

    This look Like Rice