This reminds me of the old days!
We sprouted, many different products;
the amount given, in vitamins 
would exceed 500 % during the first 
days after growth, which is generally 
three weeks!
(See the Edmond Bordeaux Szekely book
on sprouting.)
You-guys give me the tickles to start again,
only I live on an island, and the seeds are hard 
to get here.
But do it, folks, get the feel of it,
it is a lovely pass-time, and it helps your
health, and that of your loved-ones!
F S F 

Date: Mon, 15 Nov 2010 11:32:18 -0800
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>sprouting for vitamins/nutrients
To: [email protected]



Great point and I do have a sprouter too,
thanks Deb





From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, November 15, 2010 1:09:29 PM
Subject: Re: CS>sprouting for vitamins/nutrients


How about making your own sprouts--such as wheat grass, broccoli, etc.  I read 
that the broccoli sprouts have around 500 times the nutritive value of fresh 
broccoli.  
 
I have experimented with various equipment, but my problem is that I am not 
here during the day to irrigate the sprouts (at least two times, but more 
recommended for various sprouting devices), and they rot because the waste 
products are not flushed out.  If someone can do the irrigating properly, then 
the setup is extremely cheap, a glass jar with the lid cut out and a screen 
inserted (mason jar would work fine).  Turn it on its side.  
 
Here are the directions from my NOW brand sprouting Jar:
1.  Place two tablespoons of sprouting seeds or 1/2 cup of legumes/grains in a 
sprouting jar with three times as much water as seeds.  Soak overnight.  For 
many small seeds, five hours of soaking is sufficient.
2.  Drain the water from the jar.  Rinse seeds in fresh, lukewarm water and 
drain again.  For well drained seeds/sprouts, lay jar at an angle in a warm 
(70F) dark place.
 
Rinse and drain seeds twice a day.  In hot and dry weather, you may need to 
rinse the seeds three times a day.  in very humid weather, the seeds should be 
kept in a dry place.  Turn jar over gently.  Overturning the jar rapidly will 
cause shifting in the sprouting seeds.  This can break the tender shoots and 
kill the sprout.  The breakage causes the sprout to spoil.  Sprouts should be 
ready to eat in 3-5 days, spending on the seed used.  Put in sunlight during 
the last day to add chlorophyll. 
 
The above is from NOW FOODS www.nowfoods.com.  They are giving quantities of 
seeds to use for their quart jar, number of daily rinses, growing time, and 
recommended sprout length.  The seed types they discuss are alfalfa, broccoli, 
foenugreek, mung beans, radish, red clover, sunflower, and wheat.
 
An easier but more expensive way to go is to get the Freshlife Automatic 
sprouter from Tribestlife (www.tribestlife.com)  This costs $100.  You plug in 
the unit, and it waters the sprouts at timed intervals throughout the day by 
itself.  
 
Hope this helps,
 
Jill
 
 
 

In a message dated 11/15/2010 7:12:45 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, 
[email protected] writes:


Hi Elan,
 
I ask you this as it appears that you know a bit about fermented foods: but 
awhile ago (couple weeks now) I took some cabbage and “blenderized” with the 
thought that I’d drink it over a few days to increase my gut flora. I did use 
some, but one of the bottles wound up in the back of my fridge and I am 
hesitant in drinking it at this point. The bottle must’ve been the last part of 
it as it’s mostly just cabbage juice, which I’m sure is quite fermented. Could 
it have gone bad? Is it ok to drink at this point?
 
Lisa
 




From: elan spire [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, November 14, 2010 5:32 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>re: making your own vitamins
 




A healthy population of friendly flora in our guts will actually manufacture 
some vitamins inside our very own bodies.

Healthy intestinal flora also helps us to digest our food, properly assimilate 
the nourishment it contains, and strengthen our immune systems.

Many cultured (naturally fermented) foods such as kimchee and sauerkraut are 
rich sources of B vitamins as well as live enzymes and beneficial bacteria, and 
are super beneficial to consume on a regular basis to help support good 
digestive health and a strong, natural immunity to disease.

Making your own ferments is inexpensive, easy and fun, and consuming them is 
one of the best ways to help improve one ' s health on several different levels.

Elan

>>>
One thing we could do that would be very powerful is to make our own 
vitamins. It ' s time for those who know how
 to make these things to
share their knowledge and their recipes. Many on this list make thier
own silver water. Why not the rest of the stuff. So, share your recipes and 
techniques for >>>everything.