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An ancestor of durum wheat, emmer was among the first cereals cultivated in the Fertile Crescent. It has a deliciously nutty flavour and can be eaten as a whole grain (farro) or ground into flour.
The grains make great alternative to rice, as a side or in risotto (farrotto?), or can be milled at home (we recommend using a Mockmill) for flour that makes superb bread and pasta.
Two other grains are occasionally used for farro and emmer or farro medio sits between smaller einkorn (farro piccolo) and larger spelt (farro grande).
Our emmer is grown by Jeremy Dickin in Lincolnshire.
Add cooked emmer - or if cooking time allows, dry grains - to stews and casseroles.
Add cooked or toasted grains to salads.
Mill uncooked emmer grains to produce a tasty and versatile flour.
Rinse, bring to the boil then simmer until tender (about 25 to 30 minutes). Speed up cooking by pre-soaking for a few hours.
Emmer Grain (Gluten)
For allergens, see ingredients in bold
| Typical values | Per 100g, raw whole grains |
| Energy | 1,430kJ (341kcal) |
| Fat | 2.1g |
| of which saturates | 0.1g |
| Carbohydrate | 63.3g |
| of which sugars | 3.3g |
| Fibre | 10.6g |
| Protein | 10.8g |
| Salt | <0.01g |
Suitable for vegans and vegetarians
Grown in Lincolnshire by Jeremy Dickin
Collections: All Hodmedod & Guest Products , Cereal Grains from British Farms , Grains & Seeds , Grists for Milling , Hodmedod's Pulses, Grains, Seeds, Flakes, Flour, Ferment & more , Home Milling , Pulses, Grains & Seeds from British & French Farms
Category: Cereal Grain , Grist , Wholegrain Cereal
Type: Cereal Grain
This emmer is absolutely delicious, and everyone we've served it to has loved it. We simmer it and combine it with sauteed (in olive oil) diced onion and garlic, chopped parsley, and toasted pistachios. It's good hot or room temperature and the leftovers are equally good. Everyone likes it so much that we keep giving away our bags of emmer to them, so it was great to stock up at the recent pop-up event.
I do have difficulty getting hold some grains in United Kingdom I glad you don’t use plastic bags like a lot of companies do they say that it is recycling but the council still won’t take them because they can’t read
It's nice and fresh perfect for what I need
Looks good, I’ve not tried it yet.
Good products and good service
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I often find fava beans a bit bitter (is it just me?!) so have previously just used them in quite heavily flavoured dishes. Not these ones though - no bitterness at all - just really tasty. I often eat them just with a bit of seasoning and drizzle of oil!
This unusual flour is something everyone should try. I use it in sourdough and yeasted bread, and it makes an unusually dense dough that is actually rather textured and nice to stretch and fold even when using at 50:50 with white. It has a very nice flavour with a long prove - and so far has never over-proved on me by going liquidy. Aside from its unusual flavour and appearance, I have achieved a good firm and edible crust that doesn't turn into nasty shards
I make fantastic tasty hummus with Carlin Peas . I cook up the whole pack, then freeze in very small batches., equivalent to a canful, and they defrost overnight. I sometimes add butter beans or flageolets and vary the flavour with all sorts,…paprika, sun-dried tomatoes, aubergine etc. Or I can add them frozen to meat or veg stews, stir fries etc. love them!!
Really like this dish, great flavour and some real substance to it!
Fantastic grain for making risotto's and stews creates a really great creamy texture during cooking without the addition of dairy (although the addition of dairy elevates everything!) They don't overcook unlike rice so its almost a foolproof alternative, the end results are a moreish bite to the cooked grain.