RECIPES FOR WHEAT AND WHEAT PRODUCTS
HULLED WHEAT
Inasmuch as hulled, or whole, wheat requires very little preparation for the
market, it is a comparatively cheap food. It is used almost exclusively as a breakfast cereal, but serves as a good substitute for hominy or rice. Although, as has been mentioned, it requires long cooking, its preparation for the table is so simple that the cooking need not necessarily increase its cost materially.
One of the advantages of this food is that it never becomes so soft that it does not require thorough mastication.
HULLED WHEAT
(Sufficient to Serve Four)
1 c. hulled wheat
3 c. water
1 tsp. salt
Look the wheat over carefully and remove any foreign matter. Then add the water and soak 8 to 10
hours, or overnight. Add the salt, cook directly over the flame for 1/2 hour, and then finish cooking in a double boiler for 3 to 4 hours. Serve with cream or milk and sugar.
WHEAT GRITS.
The cereal known as wheat grits is made commercially by crushing the wheat grains and allowing a considerable proportion of the wheat bran to remain. Grits may be used as a breakfast cereal, when they should be served hot with cream or milk and sugar; they also make an excellent luncheon dish if they are served with either butter or gravy.
The fact that this cereal contains bran makes it an excellent one to use in cases where a food with bulk is desired. The accompanying recipe is for a plain cereal; however, an excellent variation may be had by adding 1/2 cupful of well-cleaned raisins 1/2 hour before serving.
WHEAT GRITS
(Sufficient to Serve Four)
1/2 tsp. salt
3 c. boiling water
3/4 c. wheat grits
Add the salt to the boiling water, sift the wheat grits through the fingers into the rapidly boiling water, and stir rapidly to prevent the formation of lumps. Cook for a few minutes until the grits thicken, and then place in a double boiler and cook 2 to 4 hours.
|