Okay, I was confused and rather doubted PAJerry's statement, "sprouts have 3 times the nutritional value as unsprouted wheat" - except with
vitamin content, I hasten to add
. But, what about protein?
So I looked at the
USDA National Nutrient Database for info on wheat. Durum wheat is about 14% protein with 11% water in the sample.
"Wheat, sprouted" (type is not given) is 7.5% protein but it's nearly 50% water. (Water doesn't really count unless it inhibits the bird from consuming enuf of the food because of the volume.) If the "Wheat, sprouted" was dried, down to the moisture of unsprouted wheat, wouldn't it be more than 30% protein?!?!
So, I looked at what Wikipedia has to say (I know, I know
). Seems that crude protein goes up while starch content goes down, is how it mostly works. Well, that makes sense . . . but, all that starch is energy food - so could we take that too far and end up with putting the hens on a weight-reduction diet by having too much sprouted wheat?
I guess it could be thought of as a balancing act - increase protein by sprouting but still give some unsprouted. Or, be sure there are adequate calories in whatever else is given.
Interesting
.
Steve