Small Scale Grain Raising, by Gene Logsdon (Book Preview)
Small Scale Grain Raising, by Gene Logsdon (Book Preview)
Small Scale Grain Raising, by Gene Logsdon (Book Preview)
June 2009 13
SMALL-SCALE GRAIN RAISING
SECOND EDITION
An Organic Guide to Growing, Processing,
and Using Nutritious Whole Grains for
Home Gardeners and Local Farmers
Gene Logsdon
The classic text on raising grain—revised and expanded
for home gardeners and small-scale farmers.
First published in 1977, this book—from one of America’s most famous and prolific agri-
cultural writers—became an almost instant classic among homestead gardeners and small
farmers. Now fully updated and available once more, Small-Scale Grain Raising offers a
entirely new generation of readers the best introduction to a wide range of both common
and lesser-known specialty grains and related field crops, from corn, wheat, and rye to
buckwheat, millet, rice, spelt, flax, and even beans and sunflowers.
More and more Americans are seeking out locally grown foods, yet one of the real stum-
bling blocks to their efforts has been finding local sources for grains, which are grown
mainly on large, distant corporate farms. At the same time, commodity prices for grains—
and the products made from them—have skyrocketed due to rising energy costs and
increased demand. In this book, Gene Logsdon proves that anyone who has access to a
large garden or small farm can (and should) think outside the agribusiness box and learn to
grow healthy whole grains or beans—the base of our culinary food pyramid—alongside
their fruits and vegetables.
Starting from the simple but revolutionary concept of the garden “pancake patch,”
Pub Date: June 2009 Logsdon opens up our eyes to a whole world of plants that we wrongly assume only the
$29.95 US, $37.50 CAN • PB agricultural “big boys” can grow. He succinctly covers all the basics, from planting and
9781603580779 dealing with pests, weeds, and diseases to harvesting, processing, storing, and using whole
7 x 10 • 256 pages • B&W drawings grains. There are even a few recipes sprinkled throughout, along with more than a little wit
Sustainable Agriculture/Organic Gardening and wisdom.
Never has there been a better time, or a more receptive audience, for this book. Localvores,
serious home gardeners, CSA farmers, and whole-foods advocates—in fact, all people who
value fresh, high-quality foods—will find a field full of information and ideas in this once
and future classic.
REBECCA CARTELLONE
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Gene Logsdon
Printed in [TK]
Second Edition. First printing, MONTH, 2009
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 09 10 11 12 13 14
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List of Recipies, 00
Afterword, 00
Index, 00
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Hasty Pudding, 00
Corn Pone or Corn Crackers, 00
Corn Pudding, 00
Corn Bread, 00
Polenta Cheese Squares, 00
Crusty Oven-Baked Fish, 00
Apple Walnut Loaf, 00
No-Knead Whole Wheat Bread from County Cork,
Ireland, 00
Cheese Wheat Germ Biscuits, 00
Beef and Wheat Berry Casserole, 00
Sorghum Pancakes, 00
Peanut Butter Sesame Balls, 00
Sesame Crisp Crackers, 00
Almond Crunch Cereal, 00
Traditional Irish Oatmeal Bread, 00
Cooking Soybeans, 00
Basic Soy Milk, 00
Blender Soyburgers, 00
Barbecued Soybeans, 00
Swedish Soybean Soup, 00
Orange Muffins, 00
Ground Beef Stuffed Peppers (with Soy Grits), 00
Sourdough Rye Bread (Wheatless), 00
Herbed Batter Bread, 00
Rye and Lentil Pilaf, 00
Highland Fling, 00
Hamburger Puff, 00
Barley Pancakes, 00
Buckwheat-Sesame Bread, 00
Buckwheat Blini (Pancakes), 00
Buckwheat Groats (Kasha) and Mushrooms, 00
Millet Bread, 00
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When this book was first published in 1977, I suspected, but could
not know for sure, that a day would come when increasing popula-
tions and increasing costs of producing and transporting food with
fossil fuel, fossil fertilizers, and genetic manipulation would cause
food prices to rise so high that more traditional production meth-
ods—organic, natural, low-labor, and local—would begin to rule
the economy. Thirty years later, that is exactly what is happening.
Whenever in history a new, more economical way to do anything
is discovered, it will take over the market, no matter how hard
entrenched big business and government try to stop it. Not all the
forces of power, with their sickening subsidy mentality for the rich,
can prevail forever against economic reality.
This book is intended for the pioneers of this new, low-cost
way of making food—those gardeners and “garden farmers” or
cottage farmers who are interested in increasing both the quan-
tity and quality of their homegrown food supply by incorporating
whole grains and dry beans into their fruit and vegetable grow-
ing systems. I am not writing this for commercial grain producers,
who know far more about their business than I do. I can’t even
drive one of those huge and complicated tractors that can plow
an acre a minute. Nor do I wish to denigrate commercial farmers:
Some of them are close friends. While I fear that their way of agri-
culture cannot ultimately sustain itself, we would be in desperate
straits right now without these farmers. I would hope that these
larger-scale farmers would find ideas and viewpoints here interest-
ing and perhaps persuasive, especially if they are organic or natu-
ral farmers. But the methods I describe and argue in favor of do
not promise what the agricultural experts call “top profits,” but
only good food and the satisfaction of producing it on a scale that
society can afford.
We have become a nation dangerously dependent on politically
motivated and money-motivated processes for our food, clothing,
Homegrown Grains
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The Key to Food Security
tions will continue. But we have been warned. For a whole host of
reasons, it is time to think about growing your own bread.
The nutritional picture for whole grains is getting better all the
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time, thanks to the progress being made by plant geneticists. There
are, first of all, the problematical GMO advances (genetically modi-
fied grains), which make modern chemical and large-scale farming
easier. It is too early to predict what this development will mean for
the future. So far, these genetic wonder plants haven’t meant bigger
yields or haven’t produced a farming method that third world (or
perhaps even first world) countries can afford. But some of these
developments, which can stack disease-attacking genes into grains
(or into products like milk from cloned animals) may indeed have
medicinal value and justification. It’s too soon to know.
But outside the gene-stacking laboratory, dramatic developments
in grain quality and production are being achieved. Opaque-2,
or high-lysine corn, with almost twice the normal amount of the
proteins lysine and tryptophan in it, indicate the possibility of
more improvements. Triticale, a cross between wheat and rye that
does not always live up to its promises, sometimes outyields wheat,
oats, rye, and barley and has more protein than ordinary corn.
New varieties of oats, long known as the grain with the highest
protein (excluding legume seeds like soybeans), range as high as
17 percent protein content. And the cholesterol-fighting benefits
of oats are well established now. Studies of new buckwheat variet-
ies have prompted the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service to
announce that this traditional crop, which made something of a
comeback in the 1990s, has an amino acid composition nutrition-
ally superior to all cereals, including oats. There’s also renewed
interest in traditional grains like spelt, which a few gluten-intol-
erant people may sometimes be able to handle in place of wheat.
And, perhaps most exciting of all, Wes Jackson’s Land Institute in
Kansas is developing perennial grain from wild wheatgrasses and
crosses with wheatgrass and wheat. Think of what it would mean if
we could plant a grain like we would any other grass, and harvest it
every year without any planting or soil cultivation needed.
All sorts of projects seeking to develop traditional grains and
keep them inviolate from GMO grains are ongoing. The Farmers
Breeding Club of the Northern Plains Sustainable Agricultural
Society is a project linked to a series of organic-variety trials with
do. That kind of feed supplement can keep farm animals healthy
and well-fed even in winter without today’s expensive all-vitamins-
included commercial feed.
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Corn sprouts win no prize for taste, but corn makes up for that
lack with other advantages. Sweet corn and popcorn are two of our
most popular foods, but corn can also be parched, pickled (corn
salad), or made into hominy. Popcorn made the national news in
2008 because of the prices being charged for it at movie houses. I
found that simply ridiculous. There is nothing easier to grow than
popcorn, or easier to prepare for eating. Pioneers in the Corn
Belt survived some winters almost entirely on a diet of corn. They
cracked, ground, grated, boiled, parched, squeezed, flaked, and
baked it into porridges, cakes, muffins, dodgers, and “pone.”
A very important food use for grains is in making alcoholic
beverages. The best moonshine I ever tasted was “made right”
from fermented corn mash. It equaled in mellowness the most
expensive firewater I can afford. Of course, other grains make
other kinds of whiskey, and malt from barley, a leading crop in
the northernmost states, is used for beer and other malt foods and
drinks, and of course Scotch whisky. Wheat beer has also become
popular, as has vodka from wheat and other small grains.
But the use of whole grains directly in your own diet is only half the
reason for growing them. The other half, just as important I think,
is to ensure yourself and your family an economical, steady supply
of milk, meat, and eggs, and possibly cheese, wool, or other animal
products you need or desire as part of your goal of homegrown
security. I believe in and practice grass farming or pasture farm-
ing, where animals get most of their nourishment from perennial
grass and clover pastures. Pasture farming makes a small amount
of grain in the animal’s ration practical because small-scale farm-
ers simply do not have the wherewithal to raise large amounts of
grain even if they wanted to. Pigs and chickens, both of which
lack the multiple stomachs of grazing animals like cows, sheep,
and goats, especially benefit from some grain in their diets. If you
have to go to a store to buy the grains you need for your chickens
or pigs, your own home-raised meat and eggs will cost you nearly
as much as if you had bought them from the store. Furthermore,
if you have to buy your grains in the marketplace, you may have
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to settle for less nutritional quality than what you could grow on
rich organic soil and then air-dry by traditional, natural methods
rather than with artificial heat.
Grain plants often give you other important products besides
the grain. Wheat and oats, rice and barley give you straw as a
by-product—the dried stalks left after the grain is threshed. Straw
makes excellent bedding for animals and mulch for the garden.
It can be woven into baskets too, and in recent years it has even
been much in demand for building straw-bale houses, a traditional
form of “green” construction that is enjoying a renewed popu-
larity. Corn leaves dried or silaged are good roughage feed for
cows. Corn husks can be plaited into strong rope, fashioned into
dolls and decorations, or used to fill a mattress in a pinch. Cane
sorghum makes good syrup; buckwheat and clovers provide the
bees with an abundant source of pollen for honey making. And,
not to be outdone, oats provide the hulls that the manufacturer of
Rolls-Royce autos once used to polish the cylinder sleeves of their
expensive cars. Maybe they still do.
in the fall after other crops are finished and harvested the next
summer in time to double-crop that soil to late vegetables.
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How Much Grain?
T a b le 1 . C ooking G rain s
Grain Amount Amount of Cooking Method1 Amount of
Uncooked Water and Time Cooked Grain
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You don’t need much space to raise at least some grains. A normal
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yield of wheat grown organically would be at least 40 bushels to the
acre. So you’d need only 1⁄40th of an acre to produce a bushel. That
would be a plot of ground 10 feet wide by about 109 feet long. A
really good wheat grower with a little luck could get a bushel from
a plot half that size. Wheat yields have been recorded as high as 80
bushels per acre and even higher.
But using the same kind of average calculations as above, table
2 shows the amount of space you’d need to grow a bushel of the
following grains:
Don’t hold me too tightly to these figures. They’re estimates to
give you an idea of how big the playing field is. Weather, fertility,
variety, and know-how could alter these figures. All I’m trying to
show really is that 9 bushels of assorted grains might be raised on
a quarter of an acre and provide you with the major portion of
your diet.
The amount of grain necessary to support a few head of live-
stock is not large, either. You need about 12 bushels of corn to
fatten a feeder pig to butchering weight. We don’t feed sheep any
grain because we sell lambs fed exclusively on grass and mother’s
milk. A hen needs about a bushel a year, but if she has ample free
range, she needs hardly half that and in a pinch perhaps none at
all. A milk cow, along with hay and pasture, needs perhaps five or
6 bushels; a beef steer, about the same. And we have raised tasty
beef without any grain. In other words, an acre of corn could fill
the grain requirements for one pig, one milk cow, one beef steer,
and thirty chickens.
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Corn
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America’s Amazing Maize
Some of what I wrote about corn in this book’s first edition now
strikes me as overloaded with the kind of general information that
makes a writer sound like an expert, while not being very helpful.
In rural Kentucky, where my wife grew up, an expert is defined as
someone who can purse his lips up close to the rear end of a mule
and in one huff, blow the bit out of its mouth.
Now with thirty more years of experience in growing corn on a
small scale, I am going to describe first how we do it. Not that our
way is the best way or the only way, but in recounting not only how
we do it but why, the reader will hopefully get the information
needed without all those general factoids that can make a book
heavy enough to serve as a doorstop.
Our way of growing corn on a small scale evolved out of an embar-
rassment. I became convinced that growing the stuff the “modern”
way is environmentally destructive and unnecessarily expensive,
but I couldn’t quit. I was corn-addicted. Besides, I wanted to raise
farm animals mostly on pasture, with only a little grain in their
diets and only a little machinery and fossil fuel spent in annual
cultivation. Then it occurred to me that a pasture-based farming
system suddenly made small-scale corn growing eminently practi-
cal. In other words, I could continue my addiction to growing corn
by doing it in a way that was not environmentally destructive.
Corn is my grain of first choice for all purposes because, first
of all, it is tough stuff. It will survive adversity better than other
grains. Also it can be planted and harvested on a few acres with
mostly hand labor. Ears of corn are much larger than grains of
wheat, oats, barley, rye, or the other “small grains” as they are
called. A hundred years ago, it was not uncommon for a farmer to
plant and harvest ten to fifteen acres of corn with hand planters or
horse planters and hand husking. So one acre, which is about all
I need on my small pasture farm, is easy enough to produce. I put
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By growing open-pollinated varieties of corn, it is possible to save your own seed from the largest, best
ears for replanting, in the same way that farmers have traditionally improved corn varieties over the
centuries.
get the ears off lodged stalks, which is not so true of mechanical
harvesters.
Another drawback of our OP corn is that it does not germinate
as well as hybrid corn until the soil is thoroughly warmed up in the
spring. But that is actually an advantage because early planting is
risky and encourages weeds to grow faster than the corn, making
early weeding more difficult. The small producer does not need to
be in a hurry and risk planting corn until the soil temperature has
warmed up to at least 65° heading for 70°.
Don’t expect open-pollinated varieties to reproduce “true” to
the plant from which you saved the seed. All sorts of little varia-
tions in ear size, kernel shape, color, ease of shelling, chewability,
and maturity dates will come from saved seed. This is part of the
fun of it, for me. If the seed came exactly true, as in cloning,
there would be no chance for improvement. But the process of
selection is slow going. Remember that corn started out many
centuries ago as a grain no bigger than a head of wheat. So every
year I watch closely for “perfect” ears, that is, ears over a foot
over in strong winds; and with ears that turn down on the stalk as
they mature so that rainwater can’t get into them and that then
are easily husked by hand. Saving out these best ears every year is
a keenly enjoyable pastime because of the potential it suggests. If
one had an acre of “perfect” ears, with a per-acre plant popula-
tion of 20,000 stalks (commercial growers often aim for 30,000
plants per acre, but the small-scale grower with open-pollinated
corn should be satisfied with a population of 18,000 to 20,000
plants), each plant bearing one ear of corn with twenty-four rows
of kernels on foot-long cobs, the weight of the kernels would
average over 1 pound per plant. (I know; I’ve weighed them.)
The yield per acre would then be over 20,000 pounds of grain.
Figuring shelled corn at 60 pounds per bushel, that would mean
over 333 bushels per acre, beating the world record for hybrid
corn. A good yield in commercial cornfields today is 200 bushels
per acre. On most soils, 180 bushels per acre is commendable.
Open-pollinated corn usually yields around 110 bushels per acre
presently and sometimes it’s not that good. But if more grow-
ers got interested in saving seed from perfect ears, that could
change to a higher number over time. Look how many centu-
ries it took the Mayans and their forerunners to get ears up to 6
inches long.
Obviously, after yield considerations, you next want to decide
how much land you need to raise your corn. To make the math
easy and to take into account land of only average fertility, let’s
figure 100 bushels of corn per acre, remembering that the actual
yield could be twice that or something a little less than that. We
saw in chapter 1 that a fertile acre can produce enough corn for a
pig, a milk cow, a beef steer, and thirty chickens. If you are operat-
ing mainly a pasture farm where grass and clover for grazing and
hay are the main animal feeds, then that one acre is all you need
for animal feed and your own sweet corn, popcorn, and other
assorted decorative or specialty corns for your table. Some animals
don’t need any grain. We raise about twenty to thirty lambs from a
flock of twenty ewes every year on about fourteen acres of rotated
pasture with no grain at all, but they do eat the corn fodder. I feed
our dozen laying hens three or four ears of corn a day when they
are getting plenty to eat eight months a year from foraging in the
woods and pasture. I give them a little more whole grain in winter.
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We fatten about thirty broilers a year, and they do get regular
milled grain along with our own whole grain because I want them
to fatten in six weeks and get them processed and into the freezer
and out of harm’s way. This is more to suit my writing schedule
and to avoid hawks than our homestead schedule. I could raise
them on whole grains and free-range grazing of grass and insects,
but it would take longer, and these heavy fat chickens would be
easy prey for foxes, raccoons, and other predators.
We have raised beef on good clover pasture and mother’s milk
with no grain, but where absolutely first-rate clover pastures are
not available, you will usually want to feed some corn after a calf
gets beyond 300 pounds. A pig needs about 12 bushels of corn to
fatten to 200 pounds, along with good clover hay or pasture. Nor
does the corn have to be milled, especially with softer, open-polli-
nated corn. The old bible of livestock feeding, Morrison’s Feeds
and Feeding, says that the first hundred pounds of a pig’s weight can
be produced feeding ear corn alone. With good pasture or hay, I
think all a pig’s grain could be from whole corn. You can feed
ear corn to steers too, especially if you break the ears into shorter
pieces. Slap an ear of corn sharply over the edge of a board, and it
will snap into two pieces readily. In feeding ear corn to chickens I
usually shell the kernels off the ear although the chickens learn to
do it quite well themselves. To shell a couple of ears at a feeding,
I often rap them sharply against a board or a stump. The kernels
come flying off.
I could go on and give detailed and expert formulas for how
much and in what portions you should feed corn with other grains
to animals. I won’t, though, because most of that kind of advice
is mere marketing palaver put out to sell commercial feeds or to
sell more grain than an animal on free range needs, or to help
the commercial producer of meat and milk gain the absolute nth
degree of so-called efficiency (see chapter 12). The small-scale
grain grower, with good pasture, can ignore most of that kind of
information and rely on common sense and experience. You will
be feeding your animals table scraps and surplus garden vegetables
along with grass and clover (don’t overlook lawn clippings) and