Here's an Italian lessson for you all:
farro=spelt
I had NO idea. I've eaten farro pasta before. Hubby came home last night with a box of pasta he got in North Beach. The brand is called 'Sgambaro". On the back of the package, it says:
"Spelt is one of the oldest cereals cultivated in Europe. For the Greeks and Romans, it was the main ingredient in 'Puls', a soup of boiled cereals. It was so popular that 'farina', the Italian for flour, derives from 'Farro', the Italian word for Spelt."
This brand costs $5.75 for 17.6 oz. I'll let you know how it tastes.
farro=spelt
I had NO idea. I've eaten farro pasta before. Hubby came home last night with a box of pasta he got in North Beach. The brand is called 'Sgambaro". On the back of the package, it says:
"Spelt is one of the oldest cereals cultivated in Europe. For the Greeks and Romans, it was the main ingredient in 'Puls', a soup of boiled cereals. It was so popular that 'farina', the Italian for flour, derives from 'Farro', the Italian word for Spelt."
This brand costs $5.75 for 17.6 oz. I'll let you know how it tastes.
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If it turns out you can eat spelt without harm, that opens up a lot of recipes to very simple modification. ;)
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What kind of recipes do you have in mind? Please share.
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I'll start with my classic chocolate-chip cookies, and see where things go from there. ;)
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Oh dear.
I might have to friends lock this post soon.
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From: (Anonymous)
Farro isn't spelt, actually.
That pasta may be made out of spelt, but Italian farro is a different grain. I don't know whether t. dicoccum is suitable for gluten-intolerant folks or not. Google may know, though.
Sorry.
Yrs--
Passing stranger
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Re: Farro isn't spelt, actually.
I guess the translator didn't do a good job then. I guess you can't believe everything you read on the back of a spaghetti box! But then again, you're an anonymous commentor in the ether. Who knows who is correct?
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