- Feb 22, 2014
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So my wife and I grind our own wheat and bake our own bread. This means I have lots of wheat to make into fodder for our chickens. It also means people occasionally gone its there old food storage wheat that people don't know what to do with.
So we just got 60 lbs of wheat from someone who know nothing about it except it was old. It came in 3 metal cans that have to be from the 70s. We opened it up and it was a red wheat and looks fine. I tried to use a batch in my fodder system but it just won't grow.
After a little research I figure the wheat is dead but not rancid. It was to many years without exposure to CO2. I'm told it should hold most of its nutritional value. Is there any reason I can't ferment it? I have wanted to try it anyway and have been reading the fermenting threads.
So we just got 60 lbs of wheat from someone who know nothing about it except it was old. It came in 3 metal cans that have to be from the 70s. We opened it up and it was a red wheat and looks fine. I tried to use a batch in my fodder system but it just won't grow.
After a little research I figure the wheat is dead but not rancid. It was to many years without exposure to CO2. I'm told it should hold most of its nutritional value. Is there any reason I can't ferment it? I have wanted to try it anyway and have been reading the fermenting threads.