Hi Mary,
We aren't sure how that would turn out, let us know if you give it a try!
Hi Mary,
We aren't sure how that would turn out, let us know if you give it a try!
Hello! I make granola and use your millet, but I am wondering if I can also use quinoa in place of the millet. Is uncooked quinoa ok to eat? (It will be baked, though, when baking the granola, at about 275 degrees…)
Hi Mko! Please email Customer Service at [email protected].
Yellow proso millet cooks into a porridge within 20 minutes. It also has a medicinal taste, which needs to be mellowed with milk. Quinoa (tricolor and black) remains hard with reasonably cooking times. It is similar to poppy seeds, and can be mixed with true grains for texture. When you look at the amino acids, also consider the high price of quinoa. Proso millet will give twice the foodstuff per unit of money.
Good catch! Should update momentarily :)
Hi! It's not likely. We carry only Proso Millet and have no current plans to change or expand.
I'm making a Senegalese stew that is supposed to be served over millet; however, I haven't been able to find millet in the stores. What would be the best substitute in this case? I have Quinoa, brown rice, pearl barley and farro in my cupboard. Thank you.
Hi Sue - truly any of those grains would be a good substitute. Strictly in terms of size, quinoa would be the closest.
I want to substitute quinoa for millet in a whole grain bread. Do I need to cook the quinoa before adding it to the dough or can I just add it uncooked?
Hi Rose - I'd recommend following your originally recipe; if the millet is cooked, use cooked quinoa. If it's raw millet, use raw quinoa. It will depend on the soak/rise/bake time of the recipe.
But, Millets can be grown with very less water and can be grown in arid regions, where as Quinoa is grown only in Andeas/cold climate. So, the carbon footprint of Quinoa is much higher and Millets are much more environment friendly and can be grown locally in most countries. So, rather than importing Quinoa, eat millets and support your local farmers. The article seem to promote Quinoa, but from what I read, Millets have been consumed for ages and proven to be more nutritious and healthy than Quinoa.
Hello -
If you use whole millet in baking bread, does the whole millet get digested?
Thank you - love your products and long-term commitment to natural and healthful foods.
Hi Julie, yes - the whole grain is digested.
Contrary to what is mentioned in the article, millets do contain Leucine. Foxtail millet has the highest at 1044 mg and kodo millethasthe least at 419 mg.
Hi Priet, there was no mention of leucine in this article. Also, we do not source Kodo or Foxtail Millet. The only Millet variety we source is Proso.
I am looking for the following types of millets. These are grown as cover crops and the seeds are available for these crops. However, these are not sold for human consumption. Please let me know if you can procure them and supply.
1. Foxtail millet
2. Barnyard Millet
3. Brown Top Millet
4. Little Millet
5. Kodo Millet
Indian stores carry all these millets, for human consumption. The brand is MANTRA.
Hi Rao, the only type of Millet we source is Proso. We do not have plans to bring any other varieties into our line of products.
Also, I'll mention a standard northern Chinese preparation for millet. Use a low-flavor oil (i.e, refined) to toast the millet first; I think you could try to substitute butter if you want. That's equivalent to Italian risotto, but given how long millet takes to cook, the risotto approach works very well. Then add 15-16x the millet quantity in water, boil lightly. The millet flavor, the sweetness and nuttiness, really come out if you prepare it like risotto first.
Hi Beverly, we suggest you speak with your nutritionist about this. We don't have medical information in reference to our products. Good luck on your health journey!
Enjoy many of Bob's products and would enjoy receiving recipes and nutritional information. Thank You
That's great Barbara! You can sign up for our emails at the bottom of our website. https://www.bobsredmill.com/
I have read that millet contains goitrogens that can cause thyroid problems, namely, goiter. What have you heard?
I have a very odd and insane solution to millet goitrogens.
Are you familiar with iodine-induced hyperthyroidism? This occurs when you OD on iodine, i.e, eat too much seaweed, as in a typical Japanese diet. Kombu is particularly dangerous given how much iodine is in it, and in fact, you can get so much iodine from it, you can get something called "endemic coastal goiter", i.e, there's so much iodine that the thyroid starts malfunctioning and you get the symptoms of iodine deficiency.
Now, normally speaking, millet goitrogens are resistant to iodine supplementation; the goitrogenic effect occurs at the level of the hormone uptake, not hormone production. However, if you already have hyperthyroidism induced by iodine overdosing, the goitrogens still get canceled out because the thyroid production is abnormal to begin with and the goitrogens cancel out the additional thyroid hormones.
Long story short, put seaweed into your millet porridge to cancel out the goitrogenic effect of millet. If you develop hyperthyroidism, cut down on the seaweed quantity. If you develop hypothyroidism, increase the seaweed quantity. It's a mad scientist solution, but if you have some kind of attachment to millet diets, it's the way to go. And you might be willing to run induced-hyperthyroidism in the short-run, with some medical supervision, because hyperthyroidism promotes weight loss. Just be careful, of course.
The biggest millet implicated in goiter is pearl millet, commonly used in Africa and South Asia. However, specific milling processes can remove the goitrogens from pearl millet, but I don't know whether they're in common use. Foxtail millet is known to contain goitrogens, but not much study has been done on it as its primary culinary use is in Chinese breakfasts, on occasion. Proso millet, as Bob's Red Mill uses, is not known to either have or to lack goitrogens, due to its primary use as birdseed.
We have not heard about this. We suggest you speak with your healthcare professional if you have a concern about this.
Our millet is Proso. This is the only variety that is grown as a grain crop.
Hi Rosemarie, it absolutely does and we updated the article to reflect that. We are sorry for the confusion.
I accidentally sprinkled quinoa on my sourdough bread instead of millet, (which I like to put on muffins before baking for a little crunch.) Did I ruin my bread? I haven't baked it yet.