S Rogers wrote:As beautiful as they are useful, the sunflower's seeds shockingly didn't get one single vote!! The seeds are considered the fruit of the sunflower, consisting of edible kernels surrounded by a black shell. These seeds can produce 4.4 million calories per acre.
Lexie Smith wrote:I grow them to feed to my chickens each fall when they molt. I forgot this year and egg production dropped drastically during molting season. I can’t say that missing the protein and oils is the cause but we didn’t notice any real drop off the past 4 years.
Bless your Family,
Mike
Saralee Couchoud wrote:I too am interested in how to hull enough to use for anything. I wondered about that with pumpkin seeds also but found that there are several varieties of hulless pumpkin seeds. That made it simple for pumpkins. There has to be an easy way to hull the sunflower seeds or they couldn't afford to do it commercially
JayGee
Jesse Glessner wrote:
Saralee Couchoud wrote:I too am interested in how to hull enough to use for anything. I wondered about that with pumpkin seeds also but found that there are several varieties of hulless pumpkin seeds. That made it simple for pumpkins. There has to be an easy way to hull the sunflower seeds or they couldn't afford to do it commercially
This just tweaked me go online and see what was out there for hulling.
There is a $20-$25 little 'toy' for doing this on Amazon. See the customers complaints about this device BEFORE you buy one.
There are a tremendous amount of commercial machines to do the hulling, but even the smallest would take up a very large space from your home or garage.
There was one area that suggested to use your grain mill after experimenting with the settings.
SO, here is an opportunity for someone to DESIGN some sort of mill or hulling machine for sunflower seeds. Might make a great business opportunity for someone!
Blake Lenoir wrote: Hello there! You all grown native sunflowers from the wild? I'm looking for more seeds of the downy, sawtooth, tall, woodland and the common sunflower which has been widespread and been considered a weed in some areas for my gardens next year and beyond. My greatest concentration is on wildlife and indigenous people who once inherited my area centuries ago. You have some of that stuff?
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
Best luck: satisfaction
Greatest curse, greed
Thekla McDaniels wrote:Just a quick mention that sunflower oil has a pretty bad omega 6:3 ratio.
Especially important for pregnant women and people raising young children whose brains are growing to be aware, the brain is mostly fats, and the wrong kind makes for tissues that don’t function well.
There’s a thread here where permies are discussing how to get more omega 3 from their permaculture gardens.
https://permies.com/t/6358/kitchen/Permaculture-sources-omega-fatty-acids
And articles on line to study this further, so we don’t go off topic from this great thread, until we get a thread going about the omega 6:3 ratio itself, or someone else finds it and posts the link.
Weeds are just plants with enough surplus will to live to withstand normal levels of gardening!--Alexandra Petri
Mk Neal wrote:
Sunflowers were an important part of many traditional North American people before and after European conquest. In the last few centuries they have also become very popular snack and oil source across much of Eurasia. Given this long and widespread consumption, I feel like they are a safe and healthy food as part of a balanced diet.
Maybe if a person were eating them to the exclusion of all other fats, the balance could be worrisome.
Best luck: satisfaction
Greatest curse, greed
“We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.” — Abraham Lincoln
Nissa Gadbois - RenaissanceMama
Events at Renaissance Farms
Lexie Smith wrote:I grow them to feed to my chickens each fall when they molt. I forgot this year and egg production dropped drastically during molting season. I can’t say that missing the protein and oils is the cause but we didn’t notice any real drop off the past 4 years.
Nissa Gadbois - RenaissanceMama
Events at Renaissance Farms
I yam what I yam and that's all that I yam - the great philosopher Popeye. Tiny ad:
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