Delicious Living

How to use barley

This nutrient-rich bulk-bin staple lends a hearty, sweet, nutty taste and toothy texture to winter dishes. Here's how to use it in winter cooking. 

More About:

This bulk-bin staple lends a hearty, sweet, nutty taste and toothy texture to winter dishes. Go for nutrient-dense hulled barley; unlike pearl barley, hulled retains the bran layer with its abundant fiber and selenium (pearl barley, stripped of both outer hulls and bran, is not considered a whole grain). Rinse barley in a fine sieve before cooking.

Combine one part hulled barley to three and a half parts liquid (water or broth), bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover, and simmer until tender, about 90 minutes. For a delicious pilaf, mix with other cooked grains such as quinoa or wild rice, plus sautéed onions, raisins, pine nuts, and parsley. Stir into vegetable soups and meaty stews at the end of cooking.

Substitute cooked barley for some of the bread in your favorite holiday stuffing recipe; flavor with ground cardamom and toasted almonds.

Try barley for breakfast! Use as you would cooked oatmeal, spiffed up with chopped fresh apples, dried fruit, cinnamon, cloves, and walnuts.

Discuss this article 0

Post new comment
Sign In or register to use your New Hope 360 ID
(optional)

Connect with DL

In marketing natural products in the food service industry, we have gone out of our way to define natural as we all did years ago in the natural products industry. No artificial flavors, colors, minimally processed, no preservatives and now, non-GMO.  I vote to maintain natural as a certification that our industry supports and defines.

on Apr. 25, 2012