Sproutman's Hemp
Sprout Bag - Sprout Grains & Beans without a Jar! Just dip and hang! Made
from 100% pure hemp and flax fabric for long life and durability. Won't mold,
mildew or shrink. If you can dip a tea bag you can grow sprouts! So easy to
use and convenient. Ready in only 3-5 days.
Grows all grains
and beans, including: green pea, mung, adzuki, red pea, wheat, rye, soy, peanut,
garbanzo, fenugreek, chia, shelled sunflower.
About Sproutman's
Sprout Bags:
Why a Bag?
People often assume sprouts are best grown in jars. Indeed, in the hands of
a diligent gardener, jars can successfully grow several varieties of sprouts.
But jars were never designed for sprouting. Their popularity has more to do
with their wide availability and free cost than with their merits as a gardening
tool. Any serious sprout grower will soon run into the many limitations of jars
as sprouting devices. While there are other types of sprouters available with
different features, the sprout bag is a perfect substitution for the jar, with
several advantages. A little sprout history lesson follows.
The Dark Ages of
Sprouting
THE JAR
- Never designed
for sprouting.
- Poor air circulation.
Small opening limits air.
- Incomplete drainage.
Stagnant air & water promotes mold growth.
- Open end requires
cheesecloth, rubber bands, screens, or lids.
- Cheesecloth
over mouth collects bacteria.
- Not usable for
sprouting many vegetables, large beans, and gelatinous seeds (chia).
- Prone to breakage.
Difficult to transport. Accidents ruin crop.
- Take up valuable
kitchen space.
- Time consuming
4 steps. Fill up, pour out, tilt at an angle, drain.
- Cumbersome to
handle multiple jars. Difficult to get hands in and out.
- Takes up precious
refrigerator space and shelf space. Fixed size.
The Modern Age
THE SPROUT BAG
- Designed for
sprouting. Saves time. Very convenient.
- All sprouts
get air. Good circulation prevents mold.
- 100% drainage
without tilting or waiting. Water never collects.
- Will sprout
all varieties. All grains, all beans, even gelatinous seeds.
- Convenient.
Only 2 steps. Dip in water, hang on hook or knob. Or lay in dish rack.
- Saves counter
space. Saves refrigerator space. Bags expand and contract per volume.
- Lightweight,
unbreakable. Great for traveling, camping, boating.
- Wide opening
for easy handling. Holds equivalent to 3/4 gallon jar.
- Fabric won't
shrink or mold, like cotton, burlap or cheesecloth.
- Made from durable
flax (linen) and hemp fibers.
- Flax sprout
bag discovered by Sproutman circa 1979.
Sprout bags are
perfect for making delicious sprout bread.
Sproutman's Basic
Sprout Bread
Soak 1 cup of hard wheat in a jar for 8-10 hours. Sprout in your Sprout Bag
for 2 days. Examine the seed for the shoot. The shoot is short, thick and grows
in the opposite direction of the hairlike roots. In order to achieve the desired
consistency, the shoot must be the length of the berry. Longer makes the bread
too chewy. Now grind the sprouts in a food processor, a Champion juicer (homogenizer
section), a wheatgrass juicer, or a cast iron meat grinder. Do not use a blender
or Vita Mix. It is crucial that the resulting "sprout dough" is ground
to a smooth paste. If necessary, reinsert the sprouts for a second grind. Form
a 12 x 3 inch loaf by hand. Wet your hands constantly while shaping. Lay the
loaf on a seeded cookie sheet. Sesame or poppy seeds keep the bread from sticking.
Bake slowly at 250 degrees F. for approximately 2-4 hours. Lift the bread off
the baking tray momentarily after 1-2 hours of baking. This avoids sticking.
Bread is done when the underside is firm and no longer mushy. The inside will
remain moist while the top of the bread may harden.