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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Whole Grains and Cereals / 4 Reasons Why I Switched to Einkorn Wheat

4 Reasons Why I Switched to Einkorn Wheat

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Einkorn Health Benefits over Modern Wheat
  • #1:  Better Taste
  • #2:  More Digestible
  • #3: Einkorn is Visually Different
  • #4: Only Unhybridized Wheat on Earth
  • Where to Source the Best Quality Einkorn+−
    • More Information

Einkorn is the only form of wheat on Earth that is completely unhybridized, containing the good gluten that even sensitive individuals can usually eat. Consuming it has four main benefits.bags of einkorn wheat on a pantry shelf

In my home, I’ve purchased organic white wheat and spelt in bulk for many years. Grinding it into fresh flour is the most nutritious and tastiest way to bake! I also did this to avoid the conventional toxic wheat in North America.

Farmers on this continent frequently desiccate their crops with glyphosate-containing herbicides. This practice is beneficial for ease and speed of harvest.

I credit this approach with my family avoiding any wheat allergies or problems digesting grains in general. This is true provided they are traditionally prepared. Bulgur is an example of this ancestral practice still widely used today.

For those of you who do have wheat issues, you’ll be encouraged to know that my husband used to have allergy and digestive issues with wheat years ago. He no longer does thanks to careful avoidance of wheat for several years, rebalancing the gut with traditional cooking, raw dairy, and the GAPS Diet.

Having a lot of experience dealing with wheat allergies, I can say that there certainly is a huge difference between modern processed wheat, products made with it such as seitan, and what you produce yourself at home.

I remember when I was breastfeeding my youngest child, if I ate so much as a mouthful or two of processed wheat at a restaurant in the form of a sandwich, slice of pizza, or a bread roll, she would spit up for one or sometimes even two days!

If I ate wheat that I ground myself and either sprouted, soaked, or sour leavened, however, she never had any spit up issues. To me, this was a huge testament to the radically improved digestibility of wheat that is prepared using the wise methods of ancestral cultures.

Einkorn Health Benefits over Modern Wheat

Given my success over the years with incorporating traditional methods of wheat preparation in my home, you may be surprised to learn that I’m switching the type I use.

What’s more, I’m switching 100%.

I still have about half of a large bucket of organic spelt to use up and a small amount of organic soft white wheat before the switch is complete. My goal is to have my family completely transitioned to einkorn wheat within another month or two.

Here are the 4 reasons why I am making the wholesale change to einkorn. Note that this strain is not to be confused with farro or heirloom wheat:

#1:  Better Taste

My first experience baking with einkorn occurred after I received a thoughtful gift of, among other things, einkorn flour and wheat berries. I was delighted when I ground the einkorn into flour and saw how light and white it was.

I am not a fan of bran and am not of the food philosophy that all that fiber is actually good for you. Folks just think they need a lot of fiber as they are so constipated from all the processed foods they eat! Observing that einkorn, the most ancient and unhybridized form of wheat, has less bran compared with modern wheat was encouraging to me.

I was thrilled to see that my family thoroughly enjoyed the soaked waffles made with fresh einkorn flour. It was my first einkorn dish! Ever since they have asked me to use only that flour.

Like any Mom, I’m a sucker for kids who love my cooking and tell me so on a frequent basis. So, I made the easy decision to switch to einkorn completely for all my home baking.

#2:  More Digestible

My husband’s stomach is my canary in the coal mine. If something is not easy to digest, he can tell and lets me know right away.  As he has fully recovered from a wheat allergy, he knows which forms of wheat and which preparation methods sit best in his stomach and which do not.

While my properly prepared grain dishes made with wheat or spelt digest fine for him, once he tried the einkorn, he could tell that his digestion was even lighter for the experience. This is possibly because einkorn contains good gluten, different on a molecular level from modern gluten. It is much better tolerated by those with gluten sensitivity.

Better digestion means better absorption of nutrients, so einkorn surpassed the competition in that category.

#3: Einkorn is Visually Different

modern wheat kernels and einkorn berries

The first thing I noticed when I ground einkorn into flour for the first time was how much smaller a grain of einkorn is compared with a grain of modern wheat. They are about half the size!

In addition, the telltale crease on one side of a grain of modern wheat is absent from a grain of einkorn. The reason for the differences is that over the centuries, the genetics of wheat gradually changed due to human cultivation practices.

Year after year, farmers selected the seeds at harvest time that suited the goal of higher yields and more gluten. This worked best for big farms and larger-scale agriculture, production, and distribution of wheat products.

#4: Only Unhybridized Wheat on Earth

einkorn vs durum wheat

Einkorn is like most plants in that it is diploid. This means that contains only 2 sets of chromosomes. About 2,000 years after einkorn wheat, nature created emmer via the hybridization of 2 wild grasses. Consequently, emmer has 4 sets of chromosomes. Kamut and durum (bulgur) wheat are both descendants of emmer.

Spelt, an heirloom wheat, is the result of hybridization between cultivated emmer and another wild grass. Thus, it contains six sets of chromosomes. Modern wheat is a descendant of spelt.

Note that while humans extensively hybridized wheat over the millennia, there is currently no genetically modified wheat on the market. In the Western United States, however, test plots of GMO wheat have caused some contamination issues.

As you can see, einkorn is the purest and most ancient form of wheat available. It has only 2 sets of chromosomes with a very different composition of gluten. This form is easier to digest for many with non-genetic gluten intolerance.

Where to Source the Best Quality Einkorn

The only downside of einkorn is that it is not widely available and tends to be more expensive than other types of wheat. It is still quite new to the North American market.

My healthy shopping guide lists sources that I’ve vetted that are fast and affordable to ship to your door. I use these reliable companies myself and have for many years.

organic einkorn fields in Tuscany

The organic einkorn wheat berries from these sources are grown and packaged on one secluded and pristine farm in Tuscany. It is very important to rotate crops on this farm. This is due to the hilly terrain, where yields are low and the land must stay fertile.

What this means is that this particular source of organic einkorn comes from fully pastured fields for five years prior. In addition, soil nutrition is enhanced using one year of crop rotation with the cultivation of chickpeas, lentils or fava beans. This ensures that there is no risk of cross-contamination with other types of grains. Each year’s crop of einkorn comes from truly fertile earth!

Have you tried einkorn wheat yet?  If so, what observations have you made about this ancient, unhybridized wheat?

More Information

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Category: Whole Grains and Cereals
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (368)

  1. Chris Kopec via Facebook

    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:56 pm

    They sell einkorn as either sprouted grains or sprouted flour

    http://www.organicsproutedflour.net

    Reply
  2. Chris Kopec via Facebook

    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:55 pm

    http://www.organicsproutedflour.net

    Reply
  3. Rebecca Gill via Facebook

    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:51 pm

    Where to find this?

    Reply
  4. Michelle Orr via Facebook

    Feb 14, 2014 at 9:46 pm

    What would be your favorite gluten free flour? Flour blend?

    Reply
  5. Christine P

    Jan 23, 2014 at 5:41 pm

    Do you have a recipe for einkorn bread using a bread machine? Mine makes a 2 lb loaf.

    Reply
  6. Drema

    Jan 19, 2014 at 9:27 pm

    Tried to do a search on the search bar on this blog even though it said ‘Google search’ and found that it does not give results on your other posts – darn! I was wondering what kind of wheat grinder you have & like. I’m doing some research online but thought I’d ask. Thanks in advance!

    Reply
  7. Drema

    Jan 19, 2014 at 9:21 pm

    Just curious – did you make your own Einkorn starter as posted on the Jovial website or did you use fresh yeast starter? I’ve never made starter before & they say it can take up to 10 times of refreshing the original starter to get a ‘good starter’… but I have faith that I can do it!

    Reply
  8. Nicole

    Jan 16, 2014 at 4:07 pm

    Love all the positive stories about einkorn! It is truly a wonderful grain. If any of you are looking for a Canadian source, check out http://www.daybreakmill.com. We grow einkorn ourselves, and mill it on our farm in an old style European mill. We have an online store and ship all over Canada.

    Reply
  9. Eli Rogosa

    Jan 13, 2014 at 6:44 am

    If you want fresh milled daily, organic local einkorn, check out the Heritage Grain Conservancy in western Massachusetts. We grow, mill and sell whole grain organic einkorn, Nothing is removed. All the goodness stays in. Jovial sifts to have a long shelf life, whereas I mill FRESH for each order. I mill small batched daily. I am a small organic farm in Western Mass. See: growseed.org Come to our wrokshops and heritage grains festivals to learn how to gorw, bake and restore many more almsot-lost grains. Eat it to Save it!

    Reply
  10. Amanda

    Jan 13, 2014 at 12:16 am

    I just ordered the Jovial einkorn wheat from Amazon and it came in a 2 lb. bag. We made bagels out of it and it was very good, but I had a question. I guess I was expecting it to be whole wheat flour, but it says on the front of the package that it is all-purpose flour, and the flour was much lighter than I was expecting it to be. I did a search on the internet, but I can’t seem to find somewhere that says it sells einkorn whole wheat flour. I do see that the wheat berries are for sale, but we don’t have a wheat grinder, so I don’t want to buy the berries. Any information would be appreciated. Thank you.

    Reply
    • Judy

      Dec 28, 2015 at 6:43 am

      Hi Amanda — You perhaps know this by now: Jovial now sells a whole grain Einkorn flour. Their All Purpose flour has some of the bran and germ removed.

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